NASA sees monster sunspot growing fast, solar storms possible
July 22, 2013 – SPACE -
A
colossal sunspot on the surface of the sun is large enough to swallow
six Earths whole, and could trigger solar flares this week, NASA
scientists say. The giant sunspot was captured on camera by NASA’s Solar
Dynamics Observatory as it swelled to enormous proportions over the 48
hours spanning Tuesday and Wednesday (Feb. 19 and 20). SDO is one of
several spacecraft that constantly monitor the sun’s space weather
environment. “It has grown to over six Earth diameters across, but its
full extent is hard to judge since the spot lies on a sphere, not a flat
disk,” wrote NASA spokeswoman Karen Fox, of the agency’s Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., in an image description.
The sunspot
region is actually a collection of dark blemishes on the surface of the
sun that evolved rapidly over the last two days. Sunspots form from
shifting magnetic fields at the sun’s surface, and are actually cooler
than their surrounding solar material. According to Fox, some of the
intense magnetic fields in the sunspot region are pointing in opposite
directions, making it ripe for solar activity. “This is a fairly
unstable configuration that scientists know can lead to eruptions of
radiation on the sun called solar flares,” Fox explained.
The sun is
currently in the midst of an active phase of its 11-year solar weather
cycle and is expected to reach peak activity sometime this year. The
current sun weather cycle is known as Solar Cycle 24. NASA’s Solar
Dynamics Observatory launched in 2010 and is just one of a fleet of
spacecraft keeping close watch on the sun for signs of solar flares,
eruptions and other space weather events.
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