Top Picks
-
Blue-Flame Plasma on the Face of the Sun
YouTube 11mo ago
-
EXTREME BARBIE JEEP RACING 2012
Top Picks 1h ago
-
From struggling actor to A-list star
Top Picks 2h ago
-
It's Not About the Nail
Top Picks 4h ago
-
Arrested Development Season 4 Clip - GOB's Bees [HD]
Top Picks 6h ago
-
Arrested Development Season 4 Clip - Security Cameras [HD]
Top Picks 6h ago
-
The state of education and teaching as told by a veteran teacher
Top Picks 8h ago
-
Hashtags: #WorstCarIEverHad
Top Picks 10h ago
-
Convos With My 2 Year Old - EPISODE 1
Top Picks 11h ago
-
The Graduation Song - Rhett & Link
Top Picks 12h ago
-
A-Bit of Daft Punk
Top Picks 13h ago
-
REAL Lesbians React to Lesbian Porn!
Top Picks 15h ago
-
Google Glass Photographer
Top Picks 15h ago
-
"No Smoking" - Arrested Development Season 4 - Netflix (HD)
Top Picks 16h ago
-
Macklemore & Ryan Lewis: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert
Top Picks 16h ago
-
Van Halen - Eruption Guitar Cover
Top Picks 17h ago
Tags
Description
From NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio. This video takes images from the Solar Dynamics Observatory and applies additional processing to enhance the structures that are visible. The result is a beautiful, new way of looking at the sun. The original frames are in the 171 Angstrom wavelength of extreme ultraviolet. This wavelength shows plasma in the solar atmosphere, called the corona, that is around 600,000 Kelvin. The loops represent plasma held in place by magnetic fields. They are concentrated in "active regions" where the magnetic fields are the strongest. These active regions usually appear in visible light as sunspots. The events in this video represent 24 hours of activity on September 25, 2011.
