This animation shows a series of views of the Sun captured with the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) on ESA’s Solar Orbiter on 30 May 2020.
They show the Sun’s
appearance at a wavelength of 17 nanometers, which is in the extreme
ultraviolet region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Images at this wavelength
reveal the upper atmosphere of the Sun, the corona, with a temperature of
around 1 million degrees.
EUI takes full disc images (first in the sequence) using the
Full Sun Imager (FSI) telescope, as well as high resolution images using the HRIEUV telescope (the following five frames in the
sequence).
On 30 May, Solar Orbiter was
roughly halfway between the Earth and the Sun, meaning that it was closer to
the Sun than any other solar telescope has ever been before. This allowed EUI
to see features in the solar corona of only 400 km across. As the mission
continues, Solar Orbiter will go closer to the Sun and this will increase
the instrument’s resolving power by a factor of two at closest approach.
Even before this, however,
these images reveal a multitude of small flaring loops, erupting bright spots
and dark, moving fibrils. A ubiquitous feature of the solar surface, revealed
for the first time by these images, have been called ‘campfires’. They are
omnipresent minuature eruptions that could be contributing to the high
temperatures of the solar corona and the origin of the solar wind.
The colour on these images
has been artificially added because the original wavelength detected by the
instrument is invisible to the human eye.
The extended grey shape visible
in the last frame of the sequence is not a solar feature but is caused by a
sensor artefact.
Solar Orbiter is a space
mission of international collaboration between ESA and NASA.
Animation and info via ESA
Source: Solar
Orbiter’s first views of the Sun – Scents of Science (myfusimotors.com)
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