Wednesday, March 17, 2010

Solar Corona Imaged in Marshalls









This is possibly the best detail that I have seen on photos of the corona.  It is excellent and informs.  We have had such pictures for a long time but these are much better than any others I have seen.

It also took a lot of effort to get out to the Marshall Islands in order to have the right location and conditions as well as the right hardware.  I have to take my hat off to those involved. 

I think that this is a great unambiguous picture.


Rare 'solar corona' caught on camera




The elusive 'solar corona' - a plasma gas atmosphere around the sun where temperatures reach two million degrees - visible only during a total eclipse, has been captured on camera.

Published: 12:30PM GMT 10 Mar 2010



A solar eclipse over the Marshall Islands in July 2009 Photo: Miloslav Druckmuller / SWNS

The pictures were taken during an eclipse over the isolated Marshall Islands, near Papua New Guinea in the Pacific Ocean.



Ten times as dense as the centre of the sun, the corona only produces about one-millionth as much light - meaning that it can only be seen when 'lit up' during an eclipse.

The main radiation from the sun's surface during a total solar eclipse is blocked by the passage of the moon enabling rare viewings of the corona.

Organised by the Brno University of Technology in the Czech Republic, the shadow-tracking expedition took these remarkable pictures to study changes in the plasma.

Professor Miloslav Druckmuller, 56, who took the pictures, said: ''Even though the reason for taking the photographs was science, the result shows the enormous beauty of nature.

''The expedition itself is a terrible stress. One single stupid mistake like pressing the wrong button on a keyboard may destroy everything.''

The mysterious corona has puzzled scientists for years - it extends more than a million kilometres from the sun yet is over 200 times hotter than the sun's visible surface.

The source of the corona's heat is still the subject of debate, but is likely to include the Sun's magnetic field and sonic pressure waves from below the sun.

Prof Druckmuller will continue his research of the corona at the next solar eclipse in July.