chromosphere
Chain layer is a thin-layered atmosphere just above the solar block and has a depth of about 2,000 km. Chambers are more visually more transparent than mines. The intensity of the sunlight is so strong that it is impossible to observe the sky without special equipment. However, in the case of complete solar eclipse or using optical filters such as H-alpha, the red color of the chromosphere can be observed. The most common phenomenon of the sediments is 'speckle', which is a phenomenon in which the long, thin, glowing gas like a fingertip spreads broadly from the bottom of a block to the top of a flowerpot and plant like a finger. The speckle reaches the top of the bedrock and then goes down again, which takes about 10 minutes. The other phenomenon of the sediments is 'fidelity', a gas column similar in size to speckle but doubling in time. Finally, 'solar red flames' pass through the bedrock from the block, sometimes up to a height of 150,000 km.