![]() The detailed 4K video was done with a Baader Travel Companion Telescope (560mm focal length) and a Canon EOS250D (1/1000s and ISO 100)." "This was my 61st solar eclipse," says Schoppmeyer, "and conditions in Exmouth were ideal. Criers often become lifelong eclipse chasers. It's an emotional experience, and vocalizing is practically involuntary. ![]() Eclipses are always accompanied by this soundtrack when humans are present. Hoots, cries of delight, and clapping can be heard from the crowd surrounding Schoppmeyer and his telescope. Yet when Joerg Schoppmeyer observed Thursday's total eclipse over Exmouth, Australia, he heard something. It's a silent process there is no sound in space. WHAT A SOLAR ECLIPSE SOUNDS LIKE: A solar eclipse happens when the Moon glides in front of the sun. The impact could spark G1- (Minor) to G2-class (Moderate) geomagnetic storms. Models from NASA and from NOAA agree: the CME should reach Earth during the early hours of April 24th between the hours of 00:00 and 12:00 UT. Note: The star-like object at 3 o'clock is the planet Jupiter It is a 'halo CME' heading straight for Earth: Images from SOHO coronagraphs have since confirmed the CME. Drift rates in the Type II burst suggested a CME velocity of about 580 km/s (1.3 million mph). These are natural shortwave emissions produced by shock waves preceding the CME as it passes through the sun's atmosphere. Soon after the eruption, the US Air Force reported strong Type II and Type IV solar radio bursts. This movie from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory shows what happened: Yesterday (April 21st), a large magnetic filament snaking across the sun's southern hemisphere exploded, hurling a cloud of debris in our direction. Eric Berger of Ars Technica explains why indeed the mishap may have been a success: Full story.ĮARTH-DIRECTED EXPLOSION ON THE SUN-UPDATED: Earth is in the strike zone. WAS STARSHIP'S LAUNCH A FAILURE OR A SUCCESS? Earlier this week, SpaceX's Starship (the most powerful rocket ever built) exploded only 4 minutes after it launched. Neutron counts from the University of Oulu's Sodankyla Geophysical Observatory show that cosmic rays reaching Earth are slowly declining-a result of the yin-yang relationship between the solar cycle and cosmic rays. Credit: SDO/HMIĬosmic Rays Solar Cycle 25 is intensifying, and this is reflected in the number of cosmic rays entering Earth's atmosphere. Big sunspot AR3282 has deleveloped a 'beta-gamma' magnetic field that harbors energy for M-class solar flares.
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