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  • Asteroseismology: Observing Stars Vibrate with CoRoT

    Observing a stars brightness pulsate may reveal its internal structure say researchers using the Convection Rotation and Planetary Transits (CoRoT) observatory. The highly sensitive orbital telescope can detect tiny variations in a distant star's brightness, leading astronomers into a new field of stellar seismology called ...
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on October 23, 2008
  • Podcast: The Life of the Sun

    We've talked about the Sun before, but this time we're going to look at the entire life cycle of the Sun, and all the stages it's going to go through: solar nebula, protostar, main sequence, red giant, white dwarf, and more. Want to know what the future holds for the Sun, get ready for the [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on October 6, 2008
  • Solar System's Protective Shield is Weakening; Solar Wind Velocity at Record Low

    Solar wind output is at its lowest since accurate records began 50 years ago. This finding comes from the seasoned ESA/NASA solar probe Ulysses, which completed nearly three polar orbits of the Sun from 1993 to 2008 (it is still functioning today, but at a reduced capacity). Although a weakening of the solar wind may [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on September 25, 2008
  • Solar Cycle 24 Sunspots Finally Say "Hello!"

    After an extended period of calm for Solar Cycle 24, a cluster of sunspots have appeared on the disk of the Sun. Although we have observed sunspots since the beginning of this new solar cycle (which officially began on January 4th, 2008 with the observation of a high-latitude sunspot pair), this is the first time [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on September 22, 2008
  • "Eight Minutes of Terror": Solar Physicists Find a Supersonic Way to See the Transition Region

    Solar physicists will have the unprecedented opportunity to peer inside one of the most mysterious regions in the Sun's atmosphere. Separating the chromosphere (at a temperature of a few thousand Kelvin) and the extended corona (at a temperature of over a million Kelvin) is a very thin layer about 5000 km above the photosphere (a.k.a. [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on September 6, 2008
  • Sunspot Pair Observed Today - Is Solar Cycle 24 Waking Up?

    Amateur astronomers have observed the first sunspots to appear on the solar surface for weeks. This period of extreme magnetic calm has made some scientists believe that Solar Cycle 23 might be a quiet affair. This comes in stark contrast to NASA's 2006 forecast that this cycle would be a "doozy." Whether or not the [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on August 21, 2008
  • Ten Mysteries of the Solar System

    We've all wondered at some point or another what mysteries our Solar System holds. After all, the eight planets (plus Pluto and all those other dwarf planets) orbit within a very small volume of the heliosphere (the volume of space dominated by the influence of the Sun), what's going on in the rest of the [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on August 18, 2008
  • STEREO Maps Far Reaches of Solar System

    NASA's twin STEREO spacecraft have been studying the sun since their launch in 2006. But the mission made a surprising and unexpected discovery by detecting particles from the edge of the solar system, and for the first time, scientists have now been able to map the region where the hot solar wind meets up [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on July 2, 2008
  • 2012: No Killer Solar Flare

    We could be in for a huge firework display in 2012. The Sun will be approaching the peak of its 11-year cycle, called "solar maximum", so we can expect a lot of solar activity. Some predictions put the solar maximum of Solar Cycle 24 even more energetic than the last solar maximum in 2002-2003 (remember [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on June 21, 2008
  • Where are the Sunspots? Are we in for a Quiet Solar Cycle?

    So what's up with our Sun? Is it going through a depression? It seems as if our closest star is experiencing a surprisingly uneventful couple of years. Solar minimum has supposedly passed and we should be seeing a lot more magnetic activity, and we certainly should be observing lots more sunspots. Space weather forecasts have [...]
    Posted to Aggregated News (Weblog) by Anonymous on June 12, 2008
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