Its effects, as well as being more consequential for our society, are difficult to understand due to outstanding problems in ...
Photographers from around the BC Interior were out after dark last night snapping photos of the aurora borealis' light show that shone every colour of the rainbow across clear, starry skies.
NASA/SDO & AIA/EVE/HMI science team / SOHO (ESA & NASA) / GSFC / SWPC | edited by Steve Spaleta ...
The NASA/ESA Solar & Heliospheric Observatory captured a 'butterfly-shaped' coronal mass ejection erupt from the sun. Credit: NASA/ESA/SOHO | edited by Space.com's edited by Steve Spaleta How ...
The lights, also known as the aurora borealis, are set to appear as a huge coronal mass ejection (CME) strikes Earth. Usually, the Northern Lights are only seen in the auroral oval - a ring of ...
This mission focuses on studying Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs), which are massive bursts of solar materials and magnetic energy that shoot out from the Sun's outer layer. Their findings ...
Detected by NOAA's GOES-16 satellite, the eruption raises questions about a potential coronal mass ejection, which could amplify auroras during New Year celebrations. While impactful, t ...
Here’s how it works. The sun is far from quiet. Yesterday, Dec. 17, the sun fired out an 'extremely rare' farside coronal mass ejection (CME) — a vast plume of plasma and magnetic field.
A coronal mass ejection (CME) - a magnetic storm on the Sun which causes auroras - is expected tomorrow. As a result people in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Northern England could get a glimpse ...
A study published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters, introduces a newly defined "filament channel" function. This new ...
The sun is not quite done with 2024. Early Sunday (Dec. 29), the sun fired off a class X1.1 solar flare, one of the most ...