The 'chromosphere' (literally, "color sphere") is a thin layer of the
Sun's
atmosphere just above the
photosphere, roughly 10,000 kilometers deep (approximating to, if a little less than, the diameter of the
Earth). The chromosphere is more visually transparent than the photosphere. The name comes from the fact that it has a reddish color, as the visual
spectrum of the chromosphere is dominated by the deep red
H-alpha spectral line of hydrogen. The coloration may be seen directly with the naked eye only during a total
solar eclipse, where the chromosphere is briefly visible as a flash of color just as the visible edge of the photosphere disappears behind the
Moon.
Without special equipment the chromosphere cannot normally be seen due to its being washed out by the overwhelming brightness of the photosphere. It can be seen clearly through special narrow-band optical filters tuned to the H-alpha
spectral line, and many observatories routinely observe the chromosphere using this technique, which displays
filaments quite clearly. Filaments (and prominences, which are filaments viewed from the side) are the source of many
coronal mass ejections and hence are important to prediction of
space weather.
The most common solar feature within the chromosphere are
spicules, long thin fingers of luminous gas which appear like the blades of a huge field of fiery
grass growing upwards from the photosphere below. Spicules rise to the top of the chromosphere and then sink back down again over the course of about 10 minutes.
Another feature found in the chromosphere are ''fibrils'', horizontal wisps of gas similar in extent to spicules but with about twice the duration.
Finally, ''
solar prominences'' rise up through the chromosphere from the photosphere, sometimes reaching altitudes of 150,000 kilometers. These gigantic plumes of gas are the most spectacular of solar phenomena, aside from the less frequent
solar flares.
Above the chromosphere of some stars there is a so-called
transition region, where the temperature increases rapidly to the hot
corona, which forms the outermost part of the atmosphere.
See the flash spectrum of the solar chromosphere (Eclipse of March 7th, 1970).