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A Twisted Solar Eruptive Prominence (APOD 01 Jun 2008)

Posted: Mon Jun 02, 2008 11:42 pm
by astrolabe
Hello All,

I don't know about any of you but although I'm not particularly blown around by much in the world I found this particular APOD rather terrifying. I saw what I thought was the true nature of the Sun and it's power and how amazingly uncanny that life exists even in spite of it's fragility.

In this view the Sun looks anything but stable and the hot band around the Equator looks ready to separate the N&S hemispheres. I have developed a new regard for magnetic fields and gravity, not too mention an increase in my wonder of things at the level of Quantum Mechanics. Especially in bodies as large as our Sun and it's processes.

Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 12:41 am
by orin stepanek
http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap080601.html

It does look a little intimidating at that! :shock: When the sun ejects material like that; it makes me wonder just what happens to the ejecta. I'm sure much of it falls back toward the sun; but surely some of it goes off into orbit. After cooling down; does it become just radiation or maybe some solid material becomes the building blocks of meteors, asteroids, comets, etc.? :?
Orin

Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 4:46 am
by BMAONE23
interesting though, how the apparent convergent banding in the image resembles the banding of Venusian clouds http://nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov/image/planet ... 790226.jpg

Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 4:49 am
by Qev
orin stepanek wrote:http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap080601.html

It does look a little intimidating at that! :shock: When the sun ejects material like that; it makes me wonder just what happens to the ejecta. I'm sure much of it falls back toward the sun; but surely some of it goes off into orbit. After cooling down; does it become just radiation or maybe some solid material becomes the building blocks of meteors, asteroids, comets, etc.? :?
Orin
Well, whatever doesn't fall back to the Sun will tend to get blown outwards by radiation pressure, effectively becoming part of the solar wind, I'd assume.

Re: A Twisted Solar Eruptive Prominence

Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 5:08 am
by Cherie
astrolabe wrote:
I found this particular APOD rather terrifying..
Yikes! Me, too. How many thousands (?) of miles did this prominence protrude out from the sun? Or, put another way, what percentage of, say, the distance to Mercury's orbit did it protrude?

Are there even larger prominences on record?

Cherie

Re: A Twisted Solar Eruptive Prominence

Posted: Tue Jun 03, 2008 6:46 am
by Qev
Cherie wrote:
astrolabe wrote:
I found this particular APOD rather terrifying..
Yikes! Me, too. How many thousands (?) of miles did this prominence protrude out from the sun? Or, put another way, what percentage of, say, the distance to Mercury's orbit did it protrude?

Are there even larger prominences on record?

Cherie
Just doing a rough measurement using the APoD image puts it at about half a million kilometers tall, which I think is a pretty big prominence. That's slightly less than 1% of Mercury's average orbital distance, though.

Which color?

Posted: Wed Jun 04, 2008 3:13 pm
by Tarree
Are the light colored splotches or the orange colored ones hotter?

Posted: Wed Jun 04, 2008 11:52 pm
by astrolabe
Hello Tarree,

The brighter areas are hotter than the darker, more orange areas. And welcome to the APOD Forum.