Solar science meets art in this unique portrait of a solar storm heading straight for Earth.
The image is based on data collected by the ESA/NASA SOHO space
observatory during a coronal mass ejection, when a huge cloud of
magnetised plasma was ejected from the Sun’s atmosphere and launched
towards Earth.
The image shows an extreme-ultraviolet view of the solar disc
superimposed on a wide-field view of the surrounding solar environment
as the storm leaps away from the Sun.
Two particularly bright regions on the Sun’s face indicate active
regions with looping magnetic fields. Towards the left a filament of
dense, cool gas appears to snake its way across the surface.
As a result of the ‘running difference’ technique used to process the
images, the scene creates a feeling of rapid change as the solar storm
expands outwards on all sides of the Sun and races towards us.
The running difference technique takes sequential snapshots and compares
them such that the strongest and most persistent features are isolated
and highlighted.
Note that the solar disc is not to scale with the background image. SOHO
images are usually shown with a gap of around 3 solar radii from the
edge of the Sun’s disc, with an occulter blocking out the intense light
from the Sun in order to reveal the faint details of the corona.
Coronal mass ejections like the one portrayed here blast away billions
of tonnes of matter from the Sun at millions of kilometres per hour. By
the time this particular event engulfed Earth two days later, the
eruption was some 50 million kilometres wide.
This image featured in a SOHO ‘The Sun as Art’ portfolio in 2002.
Source: ESA