NASA Caught The Sun Smiling Down On Us While Sending Solar Storm Towards Earth

This week, NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) caught an ultraviolet picture of the sun with three black spots that resemble a smiling face; this face may be a harbinger of a solar storm that might cause issues for Earth.

A small geomagnetic storm watch has been issued for Saturday by the Space Weather Prediction Center of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. While geomagnetic storms may produce stunning auroras in the sky, they can also interfere with GPS and cause dangerous currents to flow through the electricity system and pipelines.

The coronal holes, which are black patches, are places where solar wind escapes into space more rapidly and easily, keeping those places colder. According to the Exploratorium, a museum in San Francisco, these winds may reach speeds of up to 1.8 million miles per hour.

People took advantage of the chance to create memes and change the smiling sun to resemble a pumpkin or the Stay-Puft Marshmallow Man from the Ghostbusters series.

In 2014, NASA acquired pictures of the sun that similarly resembled jack-o-lanterns and gave them the name “Pumpkin Sun.” The sun’s active regions, which are what made up the jack-o-face, lantern’s indicate magnetic field disruptions that give rise to solar storms like solar flares and coronal mᴀss ejections.

Solar physicists employ telescopes that can picture the sun in the extreme ultraviolet spectrum since the human eye cannot see certain wavelengths of sunlight. SDO highlights a specific region of the sun’s atmosphere using 13 distinct light wavelengths.

According to Joseph Gurman, a scientist at the Solar Data Analysis Center at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, “Ultraviolet light from the sun can show us the origins of solar storms that can lead to power outages, cell phone disruptions, and delays in shipping packages due to the rerouting of planes from over the pole.”

The pH๏τograph from Wednesday was captured at 193 angstrom light, giving it a yellowish-pale orange tint. According to NASA, the 2014 pH๏τo was obtained at a combination of 171 and 193 angstrom light, which colored the sun in gold and yellow “to produce a Halloween-like effect.”

Both pictures were taken in October, just in time for Halloween.

Related Posts

Astronomers discover a highly habitable alien planet with a probability of 84% – Highest EVER

The Kepler mission discovered a planet orbiting the star KOI-3010 using the transit method. Researchers are drawn to this world because it has traits that are similar…

Quantum Experiment Breaks Reality By Seeing Two Versions Of Reality Existing At The Same Time

We are aware of how skewed our perception of reality is. How we see the world is shaped by our senses, our societies, and our knowledge. And…

Astronomers just discovered first direct evidence of black hole spinning

In a groundbreaking discovery, astronomers have obtained the first direct evidence confirming that black holes do indeed spin. This monumental finding focuses on the supermᴀssive black hole…

BREAKING🚨: AI Built To Find Aliens Just Picked Up EIGHT Aliens Radio Signals From Outer Space

Up until recently, astronomers have had difficulty separating probable alien signals from those created by humans. Thanks to a new artificial intelligence-trained system, eight unexplained radio signals…

Scientists Watched a Star Explode in Real Time for The First Time Ever

Astronomers have watched a giant star blow up in a fiery supernova for the first time ever — and the spectacle was even more explosive than the…

NASA’s $10 billion Telescope has just captured its first direct unbelievable image of a Planet outside our Solar system

The James Webb Space Telescope has captured the first direct image of a distant exoplanet, a world beyond our Solar System. Webb has returned several pictures of…