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From Mercury of course, the planet closest to the Sun with almost no atmosphere.
This is how the Sun looks from Mercury:

From Venus:

From Earth with a solar eclipse:

From Mars:

From Jupiter’s moon Europa:

From Saturn’s moon Rhea:

From Saturn :

The Uranus’s moon Ariel :

From Neptune’s moon Triton :

From Pluto :

From the planetoid Sedna :

From an exoplanet around Alpha Centauri:

From an exoplanet in Messier 96, a galaxy the same size as our own at a distance of 30 million light years:

The closest view of the Sun we got were taken the Parker Solar Probe:


The last image was taken shows what’s known as a coronal streamer. These streamers are made up of solar material within the corona and they tend to occur over regions of increased solar activity. This streamer appeared over the east limb of the sun and includes at least two visible rays. You can also see Jupiter in the background — the bright spot towards the center.