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Look At This: A Rainbow, Magnetic Twister on the Sun

Discover how solar cyclone simulation reveals the mystery of solar storms' heat transfer in the Sun's atmosphere.

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This vivid twist represents a solar cyclone, made of plasma, or ionized gas, moving along swirling magnetic fields on the Sun. It is a computer simulation of the storms on the Sun, created using data from a space telescope at NASA’s orbiting Solar Dynamics Observatory and the Swedish 1-meter Solar Telescope on Earth. These solar cyclones may help to answer a question that scientists had long wondered about: why is the sun's atmosphere more than 300 times

hotter than its surface? Scientists previously thought that the heat came from the surface of the sun, but how it traveled to the surface was unclear. Now, researchers think that these solar storms, as many as 11,000 at once, funnel heat from the sun's surface to the corona, as they reported in Nature

. Image via Wedemeyer-Böhm et al/Nature Publishing Group

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