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Multimedia Resources
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Here is a
basic collection of spectacular satellite and telescope images of
flares, and movies of flares in action. Use these to illustrate
your talks and power point presentations!
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Pictures
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[sohoflare2000.gif] A powerful solar
flare was seen on July 14, 2000 and captured in this image by the
SOHO satellite. The image shows many complex active regions and
loops of magnetism on the solar surface. The bright spot near the
center is the light from the flare event. This flare was
classified as X-5.
[traceflare.jpg] A powerful X-17 solar
flare on September 5, 2005 was seen by the TRACE satellite. The
image shows magnetic loops rising from the solar surface near a
large sunspot group. The loops are like magnetic pipes that
contain plasma at temperatures of 100,000 C. When these loops are
forced together, their opposite polarities cause a suden change
in the shape of the magnetic field. This releases magnetic energy
which thgen heats the plasma to millions of degrees in the bright
sections sen in this image.
[sohoapril2001.jpg] This solar flare was
observed by the SOHO satellite on April 2, 2001.
[flarehalpha.jpg] This is a telescopic
image of a solar flare obtained in the light of the element
hydrogen from a ground-based observatory. It shows a nearly top
down view of the flare so that the loops of magnetic field look
like dark filaments. This is because these loops contain plasma
that is cooler than the solar surface so that they absorbe some
of the solar light from below them. The flaring region is about
the size of Earth.
[flarediagram.gif] This is a diagram of
what a flaring region looks like close-up, based on data from the
RHESSI satellite. It shows the basic components of a flaring
region. The soft X-ray sources are regions within the magnetic
loop where 100,000 degree plasma is located and which produces
low-energy X-rays detected by the satellite. The hard X-ray
regions contain plasma at temperatures of millions of degrees.
These regions are where beams or currents of accelerated protons
and electrons collide with the colder plasma. The source of these
currents is in the 'Energy release site' where magnetic fields
are being destroyed and reconfigured, releasing enormous amounts
of stored magnetic energy.
[november2003.gif] This is a SOHO image of
the tremendous X-40 solar flare on November 4, 2003.
[tracejune2000.gif] On 6 June 2000, TRACE
observed two X-class flares (the largest, most intense class of
solar flares). This image is a composite image showing a
combination of the white-light, ultraviolet, and
extreme-ultraviolet images. In red, it shows the ultraviolet
continuum, which shows the small-scale magnetic fields at the
surface as yellow/orange dots; a white-light image was blended in
to show the location of the large, dark sunspots. The green-white
image shows the location of the bright coronal loops. Note that
the flare site runs over the middle of the central spot complex
(in which two polarities are joined in one structure), and that
they reach out toward the lower small spot as well as to a ridge
between the polarities running northward from the
center.
[august1972.jpg] The August 4, 1972 solar
flare is one of the most powerful flares since the 1960's. This
photo taken by a ground-based telescope shows the many magnetic
loops that were 'activated' by the release of the
energy
[flarefig.jpg] This figure shows more of the
details of what happens after a large solar flare erupts
according to data obtained by the RHESSI satellite. The fastest
coronal mass ejections - those moving at 1 to 5 million miles per
hour (1.6 to 8 million kilometers per hour) - are linked directly
to large solar flares. Large sunspot groups can create
multiply-flaring magnetic loops that launch billion-ton clouds of
plasma into space. When some of these clouds, called coronal mass
ejections (CMEs) reach Earth, they cause brilliant aurora and
many severe space weather events.
[carrington.jpg] The first solar flare ever
observed was detected by astronomer Richard Carrington on
September 2, 1859 as he was sketching a large sunspot. The flare
lasted 20 minutes and could be seen with the naked eye. Most
flares are invisible in ordinary 'white light'.
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Movies
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[flareWave.mpeg] On May 27, 1998, scientists
showed for the first time that solar flares produce seismic
waves, and gigantic seismic quakes, in the Sun's interior. Using
data from the Michelson Doppler Imager onboard the European Space
Agency/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), Stanford
and Glasgow scientists have tracked these seismic waves and found
that "sun-quakes" closely resemble earthquakes on our planet. The
researchers observed a flare-generated solar quake that contained
about 40,000 times the energy released in the great earthquake
that devastated San Francisco in 1906. The amount of energy
released was enough to power the United States for 20 years at
its current level of consumption, and was equivalent to an 11.3
magnitude quake on Earth.This is a
movie consisting of REAL DATA. The details you see are not
created by artists or animators!
[August1972.mpeg] The
great flare of August 7th, 1972. This is an example of a
"two-ribbon" flare in which the flaring region appear as two
bright lines threading through the area between sunspots within a
sunspot group. This particular flare, the "seahorse flare,"
produced radiation levels that would have been harmful to
astronauts if a moon mission had been in progress at the
time.
[SOHO2003.mpg] SOHO X17 flare October 28,
2003. Active region 10486, already under close scrutiny by
several instruments on SOHO and other satellites, as well as
numerous ground observatories, started up a spectacular two-part
show in the morning on Tuesday 28 October 2003. An X 17.2 flare,
the second largest flare observed by SOHO, was setting off a
strong high energy proton event and a fast-moving Coronal Mass
Ejection, hitting Earth early on Wednesday 29 October. The
one-two punch was a done deal on Wednesday afternoon, when an X
10.0 flare set off another round of particles and another
fast-moving CME.
[TRACE2005.mpg] RHESSI and TRACE View
of January 20, 2005 Solar Flare RHESSI spacecraft images of
gamma-rays (blue) and X-rays (red) thrown off by the hottest part
of the flare are shown with UV images from the TRACE spacecraft.
The gamma rays are made by energetic protons at the Sun.
Scientists were surprised that the gamma rays matched the energy
spectrum of protons at Earth: the proton storm may have come
directly from the Sun and not from the CME as
anticipated.
More to
Come!!!
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