Oct 30, 2010: Sun Farts

xoxoxoBruce • Oct 30, 2010 1:10 am
Tomorrow being Halowe'en, when you'll be out howling at the moon, today we'll look at the sun.
Well not directly 'cause you'd burn your eyes out... before you even get that Christmas BB Gun. We'll look at a picture Alan Friedman took.

In this picture you can see sunspots, giant convection cells, and the gas that follows magnetic loops piercing the Sun’s surface. When we see them against the Sun’s surface they’re called filaments, and when they arc against the background sky on the edge of the Sun’s disk they’re called prominences.

The image he took is amazingly high-resolution! He has two closeups, one of the filament and sunspot near the edge of the disk on the left, and the other of prominences leaping up off the edge and silhouetted against the sky.


Image

See that little bright spot on the plume on the left, just above the Sun’s edge? That spot is the same size as the Earth. The (inset) image to the right should make that fairly clear; I made the Earth pretty close to the right size for comparison. Our planet is about 13,000 km (8000 miles) in diameter, so that one minor prominence is roughly 50,000 km high. That’s 30,000 miles. And it’s positively dwarfed by the Sun itself. A million Earths could fit inside the Sun.


Since the Sun is so damn bright and far and wiggly, he must have used some gazillion dollar telescope on top of a mountain somewhere, right?

Nope, this is it.
Image

link
SPUCK • Oct 30, 2010 7:22 am
gazillion dollar telescope


No.. But you're probably looking at about $25k right there. Just the Hydrogen Alpha filter on the front was $5k.
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 30, 2010 10:14 am
$25k? To bring you an informative and breathtaking IOtD? Peanuts. :lol2:

SPUCK, how do you know of such exotic gear, are you into telescopes? How about telescope photography? Is there a filter for the bedroom curtains of the widow woman across the street?
jimhelm • Oct 30, 2010 10:20 am
the sun looks furry
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 30, 2010 10:21 am
Yeah, warm and fuzzy blanket.
footfootfoot • Oct 30, 2010 12:44 pm
The inch weighs in:
"That doesn't look like a ball of fire, it looks like cloth."
Trilby • Oct 30, 2010 3:17 pm
I want to hug it.
Gravdigr • Oct 30, 2010 4:43 pm
I want to catapult people into it. Not all of them, just a few carefully selected individuals.
Undertoad • Oct 30, 2010 8:43 pm
The sun is a miasma of incandescent plasma.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sLkGSV9WDMA
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 30, 2010 8:51 pm
Miasma
n. pl. mi·as·mas or mi·as·ma·ta

1. A noxious atmosphere or influence

2.
a. A poisonous atmosphere formerly thought to rise from swamps and putrid matter and cause disease.
b. A thick vaporous atmosphere or emanation
Clodfobble • Oct 30, 2010 11:04 pm
Ah, yes... that DVD is on heavy rotation in our house.
SPUCK • Oct 31, 2010 6:25 am
xoxoxoBruce;691535 wrote:
SPUCK, how do you know of such exotic gear, are you into telescopes?


To some extent, Yes. I have a 17" Newtonian.

xoxoxoBruce;691535 wrote:
How about telescope photography? Is there a filter for the bedroom curtains of the widow woman across the street?


Yes, her curtains make a fine filter against your photographing Her.
onetrack • Oct 31, 2010 8:02 am
He could be forgiven, upon examining the view thru the 'scope, for exclaiming ... "Great balls of fire!! .." :D
xoxoxoBruce • Oct 31, 2010 11:09 am
SPUCK;691729 wrote:
To some extent, Yes. I have a 17" Newtonian.
Please don't forget to post pictures, if you get some, there are several members that are space/star fans. :thumb:
capnhowdy • Oct 31, 2010 12:39 pm
I've never tried taking pics through my telescope. Maybe I'll try it tonite. Whaddaya do... just hold the camera against the eyepiece?