One of the most recent, an X3.3 solar flare, was actually captured in an image thanks to NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory. These powerful blasts of energy can bring about a ton of beauty and ...
The sun has somewhat surprised forecasters today with a dramatic X-class solar flare from a newly emerging sunspot region. The intense solar flare originated from sunspot region AR4046 and was ...
After last week's explosive X-flare, sunspot AR4046 is at it again! Could this latest eruption bring stormy space weather to ...
Extremely active sunspot AR3664 blasted a major X8.7-class solar flare. The sunspot was behind ... Credit: Space.com | footage courtesy: NASA / SDO and the AIA, EVE, and HMI science teams ...
An curved arrow pointing right. NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope can now detect solar flares occuring on the side of the sun it cannot see. This could help scientists better understand solar ...
Scientists caught a massive and extremely powerful X-class solar flare being spat out from the sun on Friday (March 28), just before the stellar eruption triggered a radio blackout across two ...
According to NASA, solar flares are defined as "powerful bursts ... "Still, the flare was associated with a CME and analyses and model runs are being conducted at this time." ...
Stunning imagery from outer space shows the power of the Sun, with a massive solar flare and coronal mass ejection erupting from the giant star’s surface, but space experts say there is no need ...
The event, wh... NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory has revealed a potential breakthrough in predicting solar flares. Scientists observed brightness fluctuations in coronal loops—plasma ...
Solar flares are bursts of radiation from the sun’s surface, sometimes followed by a bubble of magnetized plasma particles called a coronal mass ejection (CME). If they happen to spray out in ...
Bright, erratic flashes in coronal loops were observed before powerful solar flares erupted ... asteroid has a 1 in 32 chance of impact, says NASA 'A royal blunder': Sambar’s surprising ...