The rare total solar eclipse packed an extra punch.
During totality — when the moon completely blocked the sun — millions could see our star's glowing, ghostly corona, or outer atmosphere. It's a sight we almost never witness due to the sun's blinding light. Yet during the few minutes or so of this cosmic event, viewers could also see curious, extremely bright red or pinkish areas around the perimeter of the dark moon (though technically they were coming from the sun).
They're called solar prominences, and they're vivid arcs or filaments that have erupted from the sun's surface. Extending hundreds to thousands of miles into space, these phenomena can last weeks to months.
During the event on April 8, 2024, one of these arcs was easily visible from where I stood, agape beneath our eclipsed, blackened star, in Burlington, VT.
"If you were lucky enough to experience totality during this latest solar eclipse, did you notice a little red spot on the sun while the sun was fully obscured? You might have seen a solar prominence," the science communicator Swapna Krishna explained on their YouTube channel Ad Astra.
The NASA image below shows some of these pinkish prominences, including the notably vivid one at the bottom.
Tweet may have been deleted
Many solar prominences, especially those visible from our perch from over 93 million miles away from the sun, are much larger than Earth. The NASA graphic below shows this perspective.
It remains unclear, however, why these filaments, composed of hot hydrogen and helium gas, erupt from the sun's surface. "Scientists are still researching how and why prominences are formed," NASA explained.
It's not easy to experience a total solar eclipse. They happen every one or two years. But on average, a particular area of Earth only experiences such an event once every 375 years or so, and much rarer is that event occurring in an accessible place. Rarer still is the good fortune of that event happening to come to you — and the weather behaving.
"It's an amazing, amazing experience."
The next total solar eclipse to sweep across parts of the U.S. will be in over two decades, in both 2044 and 2045. It's an experience not to be missed.
"It blew me away," Terry Virts, a former NASA astronaut, recently told Mashable. "It's an amazing, amazing experience."
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Stunning red phenomena appeared on the sun during the solar eclipse-粲然可观网
sitemap
文章
67583
浏览
883
获赞
2
Facebook engineer quits, says company is 'profiting off hate'
A Facebook engineer has published a scathing resignation letter accusing the company of "profiting oQuality Assured: What It's Really Like To Test Games For A Living
There's an old commercial for Westwood College that's become something of a running joke in the videChina's Uber to launch fleet of self
Uber's biggest rival in China is getting into the self-driving game.Chinese ride-hailing giant DidiNow you can virtually explore Disney parks without spending a buck
It's no secret that Disney vacations are crazy expensive these days.There's some good news—ifTesting Reliability: Puget Systems' List of Tried and True PC Hardware
We've all been there. You want to buy a new graphics card, you read the reviews, and settle on the b7 worst tech commercials and instructional videos of the '90s
Welcome toDial Up, Mashable’s most excellent look at technology in the '90s, from the early daRead the Obamas' heartwarming letter to the survivors of the Parkland school shooting
While it's been over a month since the deadly mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High SchoolOlympian Gus Kenworthy took selfies with an albino raccoon in South Korea
Cat cafes are so 2017 -- Gus Kenworthy miles ahead of us with his visit to a raccoon cafe. KenworthyApple now gives customers a full year to buy AppleCare+
If you bought an iPhone recently, Apple has some good news for you.Bloomberg reported Monday that foClimaCell weather app features better accuracy and alerts—for a price
Bad weather is one thing technology won't let us escape, no matter how hard we try. The new ClimaCelFacebook wants to hire journalists, but where does that leave News Feed?
Facebook's news plans are starting to take shape.After months of rumors, the company has confirmed pABC pulled a 'Black
It's hard to imagine that there's anything ABC wouldn't allow on critical darling Black-ishafter sevGoogle may have leaked Pixel 5's launch date
Google's Pixel 5 might be coming on Oct. 8. This is according to a blog post on Google France (via 9Turns out, you already know the name of OnePlus TV
OnePlus' TV, first announced by company CEO Pete Lau in Sept. 2018, now has an official name (wait fTesla Model 3 crashes into parked truck and catches fire
A Tesla Model 3 crashed into a parked tow truck on a Moscow motorway, Reuters reported Sunday. Follo