Deconstructing The Sun

  • Released Thursday, March 20, 2014
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On January 28, 2014, NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS, spacecraft saw its strongest solar flare since it launched in 2013. Solar flares are bursts of X-rays and light that stream out into space, but no one yet knows the fine details of what sets them off. By observing a layer of the sun’s lower atmosphere called the chromosphere, which helps regulate how energy and material flows up from the sun's surface, IRIS can see part of the process that powers these events. However, there's a bit of luck involved in making such observations. IRIS’s instruments can’t look at the entire sun at once, so scientists must decide what areas might be the most interesting to watch. On January 28, scientists focused IRIS’s telescope and imaging spectrograph on a magnetically active region on the sun. Perfect timing: They witnessed a medium-sized solar flare in the act of erupting. Watch the video to see the flare through IRIS's eyes.

IRIS's telescope zooms in on small regions of the sun and observes them with unprecedented resolution.

IRIS's telescope zooms in on small regions of the sun and observes them with unprecedented resolution.

IRIS's imaging spectrograph provides spectra that show how solar material at different temperatures, velocities and densities flow.

IRIS's imaging spectrograph provides spectra that show how solar material at different temperatures, velocities and densities flow.

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Credits

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NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Release date

This page was originally published on Thursday, March 20, 2014.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:51 PM EDT.