Talking about the Photosphere's atmospheric pressure. I have googled for it and cannot find anything anywhere.
Does anyone have better Google-fu than I do and can find the atmospheric pressure of the Suns Photosphere?
I think you need to Google physical properties of the Sun and take it from there, the only thing I found was this:
Where is the Sun's Photosphere?
The Sun's outer layer is called the
corona and is the source of solar flares. It is hard to define because the pressure is so low -- it's practically like still being in space. Underneath this is the 2000-km-deep
chromosphere, and beneath that is the
photosphere. The exact place the photosphere begins is difficult to measure, because the Sun doesn't have a clear surface -- the Sun's particles just get less and less dense gradually until you're in space.
The photosphere is believed to have a thickness of approximately 400 kilometers and is where the transparency of the Sun changes from 100% down to 0%. At a depth of 200 km into the photosphere we are still able to see 89% of the light that is emitted. At a depth of 300 km we see only 64%. And by 400 km we only receive 4% of the light being emitted.
Properties of the Sun's Photosphere
The outer part of the Sun's photosphere has a temperature of 4465 K, and this is usually the quoted figure when people talk about the 'surface temperature' of the Sun. As you move through the 400 kilometers, this temperature gradually increases until it reaches 7610 K at the innermost part of the photosphere.
Graph Showing How Temperature (bottom axis, solid line) and Density (top axis, dashed line) Varies with Position Relative to Top of Photosphere (left axis)
The pressure of the gases and plasma in the Sun also gradually increases, starting at 0.0068 bar and increasing to 0.16 bar, which is a 24-fold increase. This is still much lower than the pressure on Earth, which is defined as 1 bar.
I hope this helps I enjoyed looking for it.