Status Report

SOHO Pick of the Week: A Concentric CME Blossoms Out

By SpaceRef Editor
December 10, 2001
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  • Higher resolution version (TIF, 5.2M)
  • Higher resolution version (TIF, 8.5M)
  • Movie (Quicktime, 1.6M) and a smaller version (Quicktime, 474k)
  • Movie (MPEG, 329k) and a smaller version (MPEG, 328k)

  • These images from LASCO C2 and C3 instruments on Dec. 2-3, 2001 give
    an excellent view of a coronal mass ejection (CME) as it maintains
    and enlarges its original shape as it expands outward. The C2 video
    clip shows that this image is the second of two CMEs in rapid
    succession which headed off to the right. CMEs are solar storms that
    blast billions of tons of particles out from the Sun at over a
    million kilometers per hour. The Sun, blocked by an occulting disk,
    is represented by the white circle. The bright object passing below
    the Sun is the planet Mercury.

    Previous Picks of the Week

    SpaceRef staff editor.