Spacecraft Sees Giant Coronal Hole In the Sun (Video) |
The so-called coronal hole over the sun's north pole came into view
between July 13 and 18 and was observed by the Solar and Heliospheric
Observatory, or SOHO. NASA released a video of the sun hole as seen by the SOHO spacecraft, showing the region as a vast dark spot surrounded by solar activity.
Coronal holes are darker, cooler regions of the sun's atmosphere, or
corona, containing little solar material. In these gaps, magnetic field
lines whip out into the solar wind rather than looping back to the sun's
surface. Coronal holes can affect space weather, as they send solar
particles streaming off the sun about three times faster than the slower
wind unleashed elsewhere from the sun's atmosphere, according to a description from NASA."While it’s unclear what causes coronal holes, they correlate to areas on the sun where magnetic fields soar up and away, failing to loop back down to the surface, as they do elsewhere," NASA's Karen Fox at the agency's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., explained in an image description.
These holes are not uncommon, but their frequency changes with the solar activity cycle. The sun is currently reaching its 11-year peak in activity, known as the solar maximum. Around the time of this peak, the sun's poles switch their magnetism. The number of coronal holes typically decreases leading up to the switch.
After the reversal, new coronal holes appear near the poles. Then as the sun approaches the solar minimum again, the holes creep closer to the equator, growing in both size and number, according to NASA. (Read More..)
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