by bystander » Tue Feb 23, 2010 9:18 pm
Solar Stormwatch Asks Public for Help in Understanding the Sun
The Royal Observatory, Greenwich - 2010 Feb 23
The Royal Observatory, Greenwich (ROG), in partnership with the
Science and Technology Facilities Council’s Rutherford Appleton
Laboratory and Zooniverse are launching Solar Stormwatch, a new web
project where anyone can help spot and track solar storms and be
involved in the latest solar research.
The Sun is much more dynamic than it appears in our sky. Intense
magnetic fields churn and pummel the Sun’s atmosphere and they store
enormous amounts of energy that, when released, hurl billions of tons
of material out into space in explosions called Coronal Mass Ejections
(CMEs) -- or solar storms.
Solar Stormwatch volunteers can spot these storms and track their
progress across space towards the Earth. Such storms can be harmful to
astronauts in orbit and have the potential to knock out communication
satellites, disrupt mobile phone networks and damage power lines. With
the public’s help, Solar Stormwatch will allow solar scientists to
better understand these potentially dangerous storms and help to
forecast their arrival time at Earth.
[url=http://www.nmm.ac.uk/rog/2010/02/join_the_hunt_for_solar_storms.html]Solar Stormwatch Asks Public for Help in Understanding the Sun[/url]
The Royal Observatory, Greenwich - 2010 Feb 23
[quote]The Royal Observatory, Greenwich (ROG), in partnership with the
Science and Technology Facilities Council’s Rutherford Appleton
Laboratory and Zooniverse are launching Solar Stormwatch, a new web
project where anyone can help spot and track solar storms and be
involved in the latest solar research.
The Sun is much more dynamic than it appears in our sky. Intense
magnetic fields churn and pummel the Sun’s atmosphere and they store
enormous amounts of energy that, when released, hurl billions of tons
of material out into space in explosions called Coronal Mass Ejections
(CMEs) -- or solar storms.
Solar Stormwatch volunteers can spot these storms and track their
progress across space towards the Earth. Such storms can be harmful to
astronauts in orbit and have the potential to knock out communication
satellites, disrupt mobile phone networks and damage power lines. With
the public’s help, Solar Stormwatch will allow solar scientists to
better understand these potentially dangerous storms and help to
forecast their arrival time at Earth.[/quote]