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Kate Wong Scientific American
Late
Monday, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory spotted an enormous
prominence just before it collapsed over the Sun's southwestern
limb. The event hurled a bright coronal mass ejection (CME) into
space -- but not toward Earth. Click
here to view a 400 kb animation of the CME. In the movie,
the star-like object moving away from the Sun's southeast limb
is the planet Mercury.
"Filaments
are formed in magnetic loops that hold relatively cool, dense
gas suspended above the surface of the Sun," explains David
Hathaway, a solar physicist atthe NASA Marshall Space Flight Center.
"When you look down on top of them they appear dark because
the gas inside is cool compared to the hot photosphere below.
But when we see a filament in profile against the dark sky it
looks like a giant glowing loop -- these are called prominences
and they can be spectacular."
Right:
Last year extreme ultraviolet
cameras on board the orbiting Solar and Heliospheric Observatory
captured this image of a prominence above the eastern limb of
the Sun.
"Filaments
collapse when the magnetic field in their vicinity becomes unstable,"
explained Hathaway. "This could happen, for example, if new
magnetic field lines begin to poke through the Sun's surface beneath
the filament." The resulting explosions, which often occur
well away from spotted regions, are called Hyder flares, named
for Charles Hyder, who published studies of such events in 1967.
For example:
On October
9, 2000, magnetic fields around sunspot group 9182 suddenly changed
their shape, leading to the explosive collapse of a nearby magnetic
filament suspended high above the Sun's surface. These hydrogen-alpha
pictures from the NOAA/SEC daily image archive show the location
of the filament before and after the explosion. The collapse triggered
a C7-class solar flare and a full halo coronal mass ejection that
struck Earth's magnetosphere 3 days later.

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