Wednesday, December 24, 2014

The Big Picture: NuSTAR telescope shows the sun blasting out X-rays


Pop quiz, hotshot: what do you get when you heat gas above 3 million degrees Celcius? High-energy X-rays, of course -- just the kind that NuSTAR was launched to detect. The space telescope took a break from hunting black holes to snap its first-ever shot of the sun. When that X-ray image (blue and green) is overlaid onto an infrared photo from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (in orange), it shows how X-rays relate to high temperature solar activity like flares and sunspots. Scientists want to figure out why the sun's corona (outer atmosphere) is 1.8 million degrees, while the surface is a mere 6,000 degrees -- a discrepancy that's like a "flame coming out of an ice cube," according to NASA. Though it might sound risky to point the world's most sensitive high-energy X-ray telescope at the sun, it's actually quite safe -- our star emits plenty of X-rays, but very few of the high-energy type.


[Image credit: NASA/JPL]


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Via: The Huffington Post


Source: NASA


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