Structure of Sun
- The Ball-of-Light Particle Model predicts the sun's core is a solid, ball-of-light.
- The red and yellow patches are enlarged views of electric and magnetic fields on the surface of the core.
- The black area represents a void created between by electromagetic repulsion between the core and the outer plasma.
- Sunspots are caused by smaller balls-of-light bubbling up from the core.
- They float to the surface -- creating sunspots.
- They decay.
- They explode below surface causing Coronal Mass Ejections.
- They explode above the sun's surface -- heating the Corona to very high temperatures. (The explosions create x-ray and gamma-ray bright points around the sun.)
- Because the sun's major source of energy is the core -- a decaying ball-of-light -- this is why the sun does not give off the correct amount of neutrinos as predicted by the standard fusion model.
- When the outer plasma is ripped away, as in the cases of planetary nebulae, the core can be seen. We call these objects White Dwarfs, but really they are balls-of-light.