2 eruptions on the sun's eastern edge today from groups 4478
& 4479. Otherwise a fairly calm sun on the disk but a new sunspot is in the
works on the western edge as well as a beautiful prominence.
A blog about astrophotography and astronomical events.
2 eruptions on the sun's eastern edge today from groups 4478
& 4479. Otherwise a fairly calm sun on the disk but a new sunspot is in the
works on the western edge as well as a beautiful prominence.
Several sunspot groups with active areas. Many eruptions
have occurred from these areas in the days, some strong, and have now created
auroras as far south as +36 New Mexico. Here in Sweden it is far too bright
right now for us to be able to see any auroras. Today's images were taken with
CaK filter 394 nm which is in the border area between the photosphere, which is
visible in white light, and the sun's chromosphere, which is reserved for
narrow-band H-alpha filters. In addition to the structures known from white
light, such as sunspots, the network of chromospheric flares distributed over
the entire solar surface also becomes visible, which precedes the formation of
sunspots, as well as supergranulation cells and Ellerman bombs.
Active Region 4478 (AR 4478) is a giant sunspot group on the surface of the Sun that was discovered as it rotated forward on the eastern solar limb. This region has quickly gained attention as one of the largest sunspot groups in modern history, on par with the historic region AR 3664 from 2024. Characteristics and Size Enormous scale: The region spans an area significantly larger than planet Earth. It is so large that it can be seen with the naked eye if you wear approved solar eclipse glasses. Magnetic complexity: The sunspot group has been classified with the highest possible magnetic complexity (beta-gamma-delta). This means that its magnetic field lines are tightly entangled. Explosive potential: The complex magnetic structure means that AR 4478 carries enough energy to trigger powerful M-class and X-class solar flares.