What is the true color of the sun and how are we able to capture it in images?

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The discussion centers on how images of the sun are captured despite its brightness, emphasizing the use of filters like Hydrogen-alpha and HeII to manage light exposure. It highlights that without proper control of exposure time and light intake, images would merely appear as bright light. Participants note that colors in these images are often false, created by assigning specific colors to different intensity levels in the captured data. Techniques for processing these images vary, with some software allowing for easier manipulation than others. Overall, the conversation reveals the complexity behind solar imaging and the technology used to visualize the sun's features.
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It it isn't a false color image of the sun, then how are we able to look at it this way if the sun is so bright? Wouldn't it just be a picture of bright light?

http://www.1spacewallpaper.com/sun-wallpaper/Sun-pictures_1024.htm

Ty
 
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Looks like it was taken through a Hydrogen-alpha filter.
 
So it's color is assigned to the emission of waveleghts? Hydrogen-Alpha wavelenghts?
 
I'm not sure. I've seen different color suns through hydrogen-alpha filters. Wish I could afford one :smile:
 
DB said:
Wouldn't it just be a picture of bright light?
Regardless of the type of filter, it will be just a picture of a bright light unless the exposure time and amount of light gathered are controlled correctly. I have taken a few photos of the sun using a fast camera setting and a telescope with a dime-sized hole in the lens cap. A better way is with a filter that simply reduces the amount of light let through.
 
It's likely a HeII image, taken by SOHO's Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (example: http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/image/solar/eit_sl_304.jpg). If so, then it's definitely a filter (centred at 30.4 nm). The colours are false; IIRC, the technique is to choose two colours (plus black and white) and an intensity histogram - min intensity = black, max intensity = white, low intensity = dark red (for example), high intensity = pale yellow. I don't know how to create this in Photoshop, but it's quite simple to do in many other image processing apps.
 
Hmm. I'd go with Nereid on this. It looks a lot more like SOHO photos than H-alpha photos I've seen.
 

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