Astronomy on MSN
The evolution of solar imaging
The Sun has captivated humanity for millennia. And yet, despite being our closest star, studying it is not easy. Its blinding ...
ScienceAlert on MSN
The first-ever map of the boundary of the Sun has just been revealed
Using the combined might of spacecraft scattered across the Solar System, scientists have built the most detailed map yet of the boundary where the Sun's magnetic push no longer accelerates the solar ...
Live Science on MSN
NASA's Parker Solar Probe mapped an unseen part of the sun at its most active moment
Data from NASA's Parker Solar Probe has enabled astronomers to map the unssen surface of the sun's atmosphere for the first time.
Discover Magazine on MSN
What is the sun's magnetic field and why is it important?
The Sun's magnetic field does impact the movement of plasma on the Sun's surface, but it does not actually impact the amount ...
In the final moments before a total solar eclipse, the temperature drops, birds and insects sing, and the ambient light becomes otherworldly. Daytime morphs into a 360-degree dusk, and where the Sun ...
Morning Overview on MSN
What is the Sun’s magnetic field, and why does it matter?
The Sun’s magnetic field is invisible to our eyes, but it quietly shapes everything from the shimmering auroras over the ...
They say beauty is only skin deep, and apparently so is the Sun’s magnetic field, according to a recent study. The Sun’s magnetic field is shallow, suggests new research, which used computer ...
New images of the sun captured by the Solar Orbiter mission showcase the highest-resolution views of our star’s visible surface ever seen, revealing sunspots and continuously moving charged gas called ...
Christmas will be warm and bright for one NASA mission this year. NASA’s Parker Solar Probe will swoop toward the fiery surface of the sun on Christmas Eve, traveling closer to the massive star than ...
The sun may too bright and too powerful for us to look at with the naked eye, even from nearly 92 million miles away on Earth, but a solar orbiter recently got an unprecedented up-close glimpse of the ...
Our Earth is structured sort of like an onion – it’s one layer after another. Starting from the top down, there’s the crust, which includes the surface you walk on; then farther down, the mantle, ...
variety of structure. Their results, which are being reported today at the American Astronomical Society’s Solar Physics Division meeting in Laurel, Maryland, address long-standing theories on how the ...
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