APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

Re: APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

by mexhunter » Thu Dec 16, 2010 3:41 am

I read somewhere that in his best moment, grew to be 700.000 kilometers.
And although the sun is it, always surprises me.
Greetings
César

Dec 15th APOD

by gajitont » Wed Dec 15, 2010 3:36 pm

Very nice short clip on this Solar eruption. HOW LONG is the clip in real life ? I suspect it is not 1:1 !
Thanks

Re: APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

by orin stepanek » Wed Dec 15, 2010 1:26 pm

I'd hate to get too close to one of those eruptions. :shock:
Those plasma lamps are neat though! :)http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/c ... lamp_2.jpg

Re: APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

by neufer » Wed Dec 15, 2010 12:37 pm

DGordon wrote:These SDO and SOHO posts need a time scale. Is this real time or did it take hours?
They do have a time scale at the bottom; it takes 2 days.

(One also has a crude idea of the time scale from the rotation of the sun itself.)

Re: APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

by DGordon » Wed Dec 15, 2010 11:57 am

These SDO and SOHO posts need a time scale. Is this real time or did it take hours?

Re: APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

by hstarbuck » Wed Dec 15, 2010 6:55 am

That's cool, even though it's hot, really hot. Aside: Even though the corona is over a million degrees, because of the lower density compared to chromosphere and photosphere i would think that there is significantly less energy (per unit volume) than these. Kind of like how the thermosphere on Earth is at a higher temp, but would not supply much heat. It's a little misleading.

SDO POTW: Filament Eruption (2010 Dec 10)

by bystander » Wed Dec 15, 2010 5:41 am

SDO POTW: Filament Eruption (2010 Dec 10)
Click to view full size image 1 or image 2
Click to play embedded YouTube video.
Filament Eruption (2010 Dec 06)

A very long solar filament that had been snaking around the Sun erupted earlier this month (Dec. 6, 2010) with a flourish. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) caught the action in dramatic detail in extreme ultraviolet light of Helium. It had been almost a million km long ((about half a solar radius) and a prominent feature on the Sun visible over two weeks ago before it rotated out of view. Filaments are elongated clouds of cooler gases suspended above the Sun by magnetic forces. They are rather unstable and often break away from the Sun. Note: the edge of the moon can be glimpsed at 0300 UT during a brief lunar transit.

Crescendo into a cacophony of disorder

by neufer » Wed Dec 15, 2010 5:34 am

[b] http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php?f=31&t=22282 [/b] wrote:
<<Schrijver and Title broke down the Great [Solar] Eruption [on August 1, 2010] into more than a dozen significant shock waves, flares, filament eruptions, and CMEs spanning 180 degrees of solar longitude and 28 hours of time. At first it seemed to be a cacophony of disorder until they plotted the events on a map of the sun's magnetic field. Title describes the Eureka! moment: "We saw that all the events of substantial coronal activity were connected by a wide-ranging system of separatrices, separators, and quasi-separatrix layers." A "separatrix" is a magnetic fault zone where small changes in surrounding plasma currents can set off big electromagnetic storms.>>
http://asterisk.apod.com/vie ... 31&t=22204

APOD: A Huge Solar Filament Erupts (2010 Dec 15)

by APOD Robot » Wed Dec 15, 2010 5:07 am

Image A Huge Solar Filament Erupts

Explanation: Click the arrow and watch an unusually long filament explode out from the Sun. The filament had been seen hovering over the Sun's surface for over a week before it erupted earlier this month. The image sequence was taken by the Earth-orbiting Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) in a color of ultraviolet light specifically emitted by helium. The explosion created Coronal Mass Ejections which dispersed high energy plasma into the Solar System. This plasma cloud, though, missed the Earth and so did not cause auroras. The above eruption and an unusually expansive eruption that occurred in August are showing how widely separated areas of the Sun can sometimes act in unison. Explosions like this will likely become more common over the next few years as our Sun moves toward Solar Maximum activity.

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