Jan24
NASA Sees the Dark Side of the Sun

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Today, NASA researchers announced an event that will transform our view of the Sun and super-charge the field of solar physics for many years to come.
January 23, 2009: Today, NASA researchers announced an event that will transform our view of the Sun and, in the process, super-charge the field of solar physics for many years to come.
“On February 6, 2011,” says Chris St. Cyr of the Goddard Space Flight Center, “Super Bowl XLV will be played in Arlington, Texas.”
Wait … that’s not it.
“And on the same day,” he adds, “NASA’s two STEREO spacecraft will be 180 degrees apart and will image the entire Sun for the first time in history.”
STEREO’s deployment on opposite sides of the Sun solves a problem that has vexed astronomers for centuries: At any given moment they can see only half of the stellar surface. The Sun spins on its axis once every 25 days, so over the course of a month the whole Sun does turn to face Earth, but a month is not nearly fast enough to keep track of events. Sunspots can materialize, explode, and regroup in a matter of days; coronal holes open and close; magnetic filaments stretch tight and—snap!—they explode, hurling clouds of hot gas into the solar system. [...]
Source: Nasa Science – click here for full article
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