Five Amazing Facts: Solar Flares

The Sun has reached its solar maximum where its surface should be peppered with sunspots and erupting with solar flares and coronal mass ejections but, according to spacecraft, our star hasn’t been this inactive since 100 years ago. It has released the odd solar flare, however, and you can learn more about them here.

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Four images from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory of an X3.2-class flare from late at night on May 13, 2013. The flare has been captured in different wavelengths to help astronomers learn more about these outbursts.

Four images from NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory of an X3.2-class flare from late at night on May 13, 2013. The flare has been captured in different wavelengths to help astronomers learn more about these outbursts.

1. The fastest ejections reach Earth in less than two days

Solar flares are sometimes accompanied by coronal mass ejections (CMEs), huge outpourings of energy and material that travel at up to 1,000 kilometres (620 miles) per second.

2. They release ten million times more energy than a volcano

A volcanic eruption pales in comparison to a solar flare. In a matter of minutes a solar flare, thought to be caused by magnetic fields, can eject billions of tons of charged particles.

3. During peak times there are over 20 solar flares a day

When the Sun is at solar maximum, the period in its 11-year cycle when its activity is at its highest, the Sun can unleash over 100 solar flares every week.

4. They are almost as hot as the core of the Sun

A solar flare can have a temperature of several million Kelvin. For comparison the hottest natural temperature ever recorded on Earth was a relatively measly 330 Kelvin in Death Valley, California.

5. A solar eruption once knocked out a power grid in Quebec

In March 1989 a huge CME, one of the largest on record, caused a geomagnetic storm in Earth’s atmosphere that crippled the Hydro-Quebec power grid in Canada.

Image courtesy of NASA/SDO

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