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Sunday, April 18, 2010

STEREO Captures Huge Eruptive Prominence

The STEREO (Ahead) spacecraft caught this spectacular eruptive prominence in extreme UV light as it blasted away from the Sun (Apr. 12-13, 2010). This was certainly among the largest prominence eruptions seen by either the STEREO or SOHO missions. The length of the prominence appears to stretch almost halfway across the sun, about 50 million miles. Prominences are cooler clouds of plasma that hover above the Sun’s surface, tethered by magnetic forces. They are notoriously unstable and commonly erupt as this one did in a dramatic fashion. The video clip shows about 19 hours of activity.





Still from video for downloading

For more information visit http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/stereo/multimedia/Huge-Eruptive-Prominence.html

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