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Solar CinemaThe Solar & Heliospheric Observatory recorded a beautiful solar prominence on January 18. |
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Prominences are loops of magnetic fields with hot gas trapped inside. Sometimes, as the fields become unstable, the they will erupt and rise off of the Sun in just a few minutes or hours. Beautiful prominences like these become more common as we approach solar maximum.
When will the solar maximum actually take place? Recent work by David Hathaway, a solar physicist at the Marshall Space Flight Center, and his collaborators indicate that the solar activity will peak around the middle of the year 2000.
Above: By combining data about geomagnetic
activity during the previous solar cycle with sunspot counts
for the current cycle, David Hathaway and collaborators are able
to predict when the next sunspot maximum will occur. [Click
here for details]. According to their results, the sunspot
number -- and other forms of solar activity -- will peak beginning
in mid-2000. The dotted lines above and below the solid curve
line indicate the prediction curve's range of error. During this period of heightened solar activity, the Sun puts
on a nearly non-stop show. For instance, just one week ago SOHO
captured another sequence of prominences. This time, the Extreme Ultraviolet
Imaging telescope was observing in a mode with a higher-than-usual
telemetry rate, due to the fact that the Large Angle Spectrometric
Coronagraph (LASCO)
instrument had its doors closed in anticipation of spacecraft
maneuvers. The resulting movies (click on the image for a Quicktime
animation) are awesome. If eruptions like these are directed
toward the Earth they can cause a significant amount of aurora
and other geomagnetic activity. |
| Web Links |
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SpaceWeather.com -Science news and information about the Sun-Earth environment. NOAA Space Environment Center -official site for space weather forecasts and information Solar and Heliospheric Observatory -home page |
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