In the three years since it
first provided images of the sun in the spring of 2010, NASA’s Solar
Dynamics Observatory has had virtually unbroken coverage of the sun's rise
toward solar maximum, the peak of solar activity in its regular 11-year cycle.
This video shows those three years of the sun at a pace of two images per day.
SDO’s Atmospheric Imaging Assembly captures a shot of the sun every 12 seconds
in 10 different wavelengths. The images shown here are based on a wavelength of
171 angstroms, which is in the extreme ultraviolet range and shows solar
material at around 600,000 kelvins (about 1.08 million F). In this wavelength
it is easy to see the sun’s 25-day rotation as well as how solar activity has
increased over three years.
During the course of the
video, the sun subtly increases and decreases in apparent size. This is because
the distance between the SDO spacecraft and the sun varies over time. The image
is, however, remarkably consistent and stable despite the fact that SDO orbits
Earth at 6,876 mph and Earth orbits the sun at 67,062 mph. Such stability is
crucial for scientists, who use SDO to learn more about our closest star. These
images have regularly caught solar flares and coronal mass ejections in the
act, types of space weather that can send radiation and solar material toward
Earth and interfere with satellites in space. SDO’s glimpses into the violent
dance on the sun help scientists understand what causes these giant explosions
-- with the hopes of some day improving our ability to predict this space
weather.
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