Solar-staring spacecraft shows its flare.Hurling a storm of charged particles earthward earth·ward adv. & adj. To or toward the earth. earth wards adv. , this solar eruption
was imaged Dec. 13, 2008, by the recently launched Japanese-U.S.-British
Hinode spacecraft (SN: 11/11/06, p. 309). A flare (bright areas) arches
over a sunspot sunspotCooler-than-average region of gas on the Sun's surface associated with strong local magnetic activity. Sunspots appear as dark spots, but only in contrast with the surrounding photosphere, which is several thousand degrees hotter. , whose dark region's diameter is about four times as large as that of Earth. This ultrasharp image of the sun's chromosphere chromosphere (krō`məsfēr') [Gr.,=color sphere], layer of rarefied, transparent gases in the solar atmosphere; it measures 6,000 mi (9,700 km) in thickness and lies between the photosphere (the sun's visible surface) and the corona (its , a layer sandwiched between the star's visible surface and its outer atmosphere, reveals a surprisingly complex array of filaments of roiling gas, some as small as 70 kilometers across, says Richard Fisher, director of NASA'S heliophysics division in Washington, D.C. The structure dovetails with other Hinode images that show an array of looping magnetic fields closer to the sun's surface. The images, released by NASA NASA: see National Aeronautics and Space Administration. NASA in full National Aeronautics and Space Administration Independent U.S. this week, provide new insight into the magnetic origin of solar eruptions. |
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