A massive wall of falling plasma, known as a polar crown prominence, was recently captured in a stunningly-detailed new photo of the sun.
An astrophotographer has snapped a stunning shot of an enormous wall of plasma falling down toward the solar surface at impossibly fast speeds after being spat out near the sun's south pole.
Eduardo Schaberger Poupeau, who is based near Rafaela in Argentina, captured the striking image on March 9 using specialized camera equipment.
The plasma wall "rose some 100,000 km [kilometers, or 62,000 miles] above the solar surface,"
Poupeau told Spaceweather.com. For context, that is as tall as around eight Earths stacked on top of one another.
Source
An astrophotographer has snapped a stunning shot of an enormous wall of plasma falling down toward the solar surface at impossibly fast speeds after being spat out near the sun's south pole.
Eduardo Schaberger Poupeau, who is based near Rafaela in Argentina, captured the striking image on March 9 using specialized camera equipment.
The plasma wall "rose some 100,000 km [kilometers, or 62,000 miles] above the solar surface,"
Poupeau told Spaceweather.com. For context, that is as tall as around eight Earths stacked on top of one another.
Source