Nasa posts picture of scary ‘smile’ in the Sun as Halloween could bring solar storms

Andrew Griffin
Friday 28 October 2022 12:14 EDT
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Sun appears to smile in Nasa picture
Sun appears to smile in Nasa picture (NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory)

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Nasa has shared an image of a scary-looking “smile” in the Sun, ahead of a Halloween that could bring solar storms.

The smile is not as friendly as it appears: the dark patches that make up the figure are coronal holes that allow solar wind to escape from the Sun. That wind could trigger a solar storm on Earth, forecasts suggest, though it is expected to be relatively minor.

The dark patches are really cooler areas, which look that way because of the technology used to capture the Sun’s surface. But social media uses quickly noted that they were fitting given the approach of Halloween, when Nasa shared the image on social media.

The two coronal holes could help enhance the solar wind, according to the Met Office. It suggested that “slightly elevated or elevated winds” could last until the day of Halloween.

That unsettled or active activity on the Sun could lead to a minor geomagnetic storm, it forecasted.

The extra activity also led the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to start a geomagnetic storm watch. That period will last until 2 November.

Solar storms are a major cause of concern for experts who fear that activity on the Sun could cause to significant problems on Earth. Extreme solar storms could knock out power systems, disrupt spacecraft and the navigation systems that rely on them, and take down radio communications.

But experts only predicted that the upcoming activity would lead to a minor solar storm. In such a storm, there can be weak fluctuations in the power grid, small impacts on satellites and aurora could be visible.

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