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Well yes, our solar star does indeed have water inside it. On the other hand, do not believe that it is about seas, rivers or others.

As we report Release in his article of June 20, 1995, this revelation was made from sunspots detected by a team of American and Canadian physicists. According to them, these spots are none other than traces of water molecules and this deduction has been confirmed by reputable chemists. According to Richard Marsden, an astrophysicist with the Solar System Division of the European Space Agency (ESA):

Solar water has nothing to do with what we know on Earth. This is water vapor but does not form clouds.

According to Bernard Froing, solar physicist at ESA, the water present in sunspots would be equivalent to 1/50,000th of the volume of the oceans on our planet. The traces of water were discovered in the regions ” the coldest from the Sun, which are around 3,200°C. And these water molecules dissociate in other regions of the Sun where it is 2,000°C warmer.

However, if this discovery may surprise us – after all, don’t we see the Sun as an extremely hot star and therefore unlikely to contain an ounce of water? –, for scientists, the presence of water molecules in the Sun is not so surprising.

To confirm that sunspots were indeed water, chemists did an experiment in the lab. They heated water to 700°C and passed the fingerprint of this in vitro vapor to spectroscopic analysis. Guess what ? The water vapor fingerprint corresponded to the water molecules present in the Sun.

But how will it help us to know that there is water in the Sun? For the moment, we don’t know, but in any case, it’s always good to know.


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