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solar flare
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solar flare

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A huge solar flare (bottom left of the Sun's disc) sends atomic particles in enormous quantities and at great speed into the Solar System. Flares are associated with sunspots, areas on the surface of the Sun that are visibly darker and measurably much cooler. Like sunspots, therefore, flares fluctuate in number according to an apparent 11-year cycle.

Brilliant eruption on the Sun above a sunspot, thought to be caused by release of magnetic energy. Flares reach maximum brightness within a few minutes, then fade away over about an hour. They eject a burst of atomic particles into space at up to 1,000 kps/600 mps. When these particles reach Earth they can cause radio blackouts, disruptions of the Earth's magnetic field, and auroras.

In 2003 astronomers using the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) observed the biggest solar flare ever recorded. Solar flare strength is given an ‘X’ designation ranging from a minimum X1 up to X20 (the latter being the magnitude of the previous largest recorded solar flare, in 2001). The 2003 flare was so powerful that it overloaded the measuring devices, and estimates of its magnitude placed it at around X28.



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Solar flares act like a flash bulb, giving added illumination and allowing C1XS to 'see' more elements.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The sun has entered its weakest cycle of magnetic activity since 1928, meaning fewer solar flares and coronal mass ejections, scientists predicted in a May 8 teleconference.
One thing they've learned more about during this low sunspot period is that for astronauts, exposure to galactic cosmic radiation is much worse than exposure to solar flares or other radiation in an active solar period.
 
 
 
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