SDO: Year 4

From Wikivideos

Video source record: https://images.nasa.gov/details-GSFC_20140211_SDO_m11460_Year4

SDO: Year 4
0:00 / --:--

Player mode uses your custom Wikivideos controls.

Summary

Description The sun is always changing and NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory is always watching. Launched on Feb. 11, 2010, SDO keeps a 24-hour eye on the entire disk of the sun, with a prime view of the graceful dance of solar material coursing through the sun's atmosphere, the corona. SDO's fourth year in orbit was no exception: NASA is releasing a movie of some of SDO's best sightings of the year, including massive solar explosions and giant sunspot shows. SDO captures images of the sun in 10 different wavelengths, each of which helps highlight a different temperature of solar material. Different temperatures can, in turn, show specific structures on the sun such as solar flares, which are giant explosions of light and x-rays, or coronal loops, which are streams of solar material traveling up and down looping magnetic field lines. The movie shows examples of both, as well as what's called prominence eruptions, when masses of solar material leap off the sun. The movie also shows a sunspot group
Date 2014-02-11
Source images.nasa.gov

Licensing

Public Domain (US Government Work)

View original file record