As a star, the sun is continuously emitting an enormous amount of energy
33 into space, up to as much as 3. 9 X 10 erg/ s. This energy emission
consists of three modes. Almost all the energy is emitted in the form of
the familiar black-body radiation, commonly called sunlight. Although
the amount of energy emitted is small, the sun also emits x rays,
extreme ultraviolet (EUV), and UV radiations, which are absorbed above
the earth's stratosphere. These constitute the second mode of solar
energy, separate from the black-body radiation that penetrates the lower
layers of the atmosphere. The sun has another important mode of energy
emission in which the energy is carried out by charged particles. These
particles have a very wide range of energies, from less than I keY to
more than I GeV. Because of this wide range, it is convenient to group
them into two components: particles with energies greater than 10 keY
and the lower-energy particles. The former are generally referred to as
solar protons or solar cosmic rays; their emission is associated with
active features on the sun. Their interaction with the atmosphere is
similar to that of the x ray and EUV radiation. Low-energy particles
constitute plasma, a gas of equal numbers of positive and negative
particles. Actually, this plasma is the outermost part of the solar
atmosphere, namely the corona, which blows out continuously . For this
reason, the plasma flow is called the solar wind.