By Kennedy Maize Solar, solar everywhere From the sun did drink; Solar, solar somewhere The sun did not sink. Once upon a time, not that long ago, advocates of using sunlight to make electricity were ...
What is space weather, what causes it, and how does it affect humans? Physicist Robyn Millan, who co-chaired a recent ...
NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory captured a M7.9-class solar flare. See footage of the blast in multiple wavelengths. Credit: ...
Sunspot AR3256 erupted with an X1.2-class solar flare. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured the fireworks in multiple ...
Researchers have made a potentially crucial breakthrough in solar science that could help predict solar flares with greater ...
The northern lights are best seen between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. local time while at a high vantage point away from light ...
Scientists have long struggled to accurately predict solar flares, but a recent breakthrough using NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory has uncovered a promising new sign: flickering coronal loops. These ...
It’s notoriously difficult to predict when the sun will belch out a large solar flare — an explosive burst of radiation that ...
Auroral activity is best seen between 10 p.m. and 2 a.m. local time while at a high vantage point away from light pollution, ...
A very long solar filament that had been snaking around the Sun erupted with a flourish. The bright light of a solar flare on ...
Solar material is gusting out of the dark patch in the Sun's corona towards Earth at more than a million miles per hour.
According to the monitoring data, following the flare, the level of impact of solar X-ray bursts on the Earth's ionosphere increased to the R1 (weak) level, on a five-point scale topping out at R5, or ...