Solar purrominence

Bad Astronomy
By Phil Plait
Oct 11, 2011 4:00 PMNov 19, 2019 8:14 PM

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I know I've posted a lot about the Sun lately, and I knowI just posted a funny picture by astrophotographer Alan Friedman. And maybe I should've waited for Caturday to post this. But c'mon. How could I not post this as soon as I saw it?

[Click to concatenate.] It's a SOL cat! I love how it looks like it's rubbing its head on the Sun. If you want the technical description of what you're seeing, it's a solar prominence, a long stream of ionized gas belched out by the Sun, flowing along its magnetic field lines. Think of it as a 80,000 kilometer-long cosmic hairball the Sun hacked up. I will from now on. And if you liked that picture by Alan, this one will make your hair stand on end!

[UPDATE: Alan calculated the size of this prominence as 80,000 km, and that looks about right to me. So just for comparison, I added the Earth roughly to scale in the picture here. That's a pretty big cat. It's head is bigger than our whole planet! Imagine the litter box that would take...]


Related posts: - Sunsquatch - Seriously jaw-dropping picture of the Sun - The boiling, erupting Sun - The delicate tendrils of a solar dragon - For your viewing pleasure: Active Region 1302

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