Agencies-Gaza post
Fire valley appears from a huge solar explosion
Space Weather on Monday reported that dark magnetic strands came out of the Sun’s atmosphere, with NASA’s Sun Dynamics Observatory recording the solar explosion.
The valley that appeared in the sun was 155 thousand miles long and 15500 miles deep, and the observatory was able to see a turn of plasma threads hanging over the valley’s surface, before launching into space.
The Solar Observatory and the Heliosphere (SOHO) saw a type of solar storm called coronal mass expulsion, or CME, coming out of the Sun’s northern hemisphere after the solar eruption.
The distinction between CMEs and solar outbursts is that CMEs travel slower than solar flares that can reach Earth in about eight minutes.
The most secured CME takes 15 to 18 hours to reach Earth, and NOAA is currently modeling CME to decide whether to hit Earth, and although CME appears to be less threatening, there is a chance of a solar outbreak caused by this explosion.
Space Weather reported nearly six large solar spots on the Sun, over two of which posed a threat of strong fire. ”
NASA reported the phenomenon and said, “Magnetic field lines are often intertwined near solar spots, intersected and reorganized, which can cause a sudden explosion of energy called solar glow.”
NOAA scientists assess the probability of 45% M-class, medium-sized, and 10% X-class, large-sized flares, and X-class flares being even scarier because they can cause anterior radio blackouts and long-lasting radiation storms.
Category M flares only cause short power outages in the north and south bars of the Earth.