NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory captured an X2.3 solar flare on November 6th, 2024, causing shortwave radio blackouts in ...
First Imagery from GOES-19 SUVI Instrument The Solar Ultraviolet Imager (SUVI) onboard NOAA’s GOES-19 satellite (launched on ...
A regular camera with the focus set to the farthest possible setting and a wide aperture, low shutter speed and high ISO ...
Now that the sun has reached its solar maximum, aurora chasers should expect the northern lights to appear more frequently in ...
An intense X2.3-class flare was released by the sun yesterday, followed by several M-class flares, which caused a series of radio blackouts around the world.
A massive X2.3 solar flare erupts from sunspot AR 3883, causing radio blackouts over southern hemisphere regions.
Solar eclipse glasses protect your eyes by blocking the short wavelength bluish visible light that can damage your retina. A ...
Geomagnetic storming of this magnitude is common on NOAA’s 5-level scale. However, several sunspot regions on the Sun are ...
As the solar cycle reaches its zenith, solar flares, solar system's largest explosive events, increase, which causes phenomena such as May's solar storm, the largest observed by NASA in decades.
The Solar Ultraviolet Imager, or SUVI, onboard NOAA's GOES-19 satellite, which launched on June 25, 2024, began observing the ...
More powerful solar flares are more common during the sun's ... which is thought to have released more power than millions of the largest nuclear bomb ever exploded on Earth," Woodward said.
Solar winds, flares and ‘cannonballs’ The sun’s dynamic and complex ... Scientists predict these solar storms will reach their peak in 2025. But sometimes, the biggest storms can hit years after the ...