The US National Solar Observatory released the highest analysiss images and videos ever taken from the Sun.
The images, collected with the National's Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope Science Foundation, show the Sun in unprecedented detail, revealing features for the first time that are only 30 kilometers in size.
The 4 meter long Inouye solar telescope is located near the top of the volcano Haleakala ("House of the Sun" in Hawaiian) on the island of Maui in Hawaii, and these incredible images of the sun is his debut in the world.
We read in statements by France Córdova, director of the National Science Foundation (= NSF): “Ever since NSF started working with this ground-based telescope, we have been looking forward to the first images. We can now share these images and videos, which are the most detailed of the Sun to date. "Αυτό This telescope will improve our understanding of what causes space weather and ultimately help us better predict solar storms."
Also, Thomas Rimmele, director of the Inouye Solar Telescope explains: “It's all about the magnetic field. To unravel the Sun's greatest mysteries, we need not only to clearly see these tiny structures from 93 million miles away, but to measure with great precision the strength and direction of the magnetic field near the surface and trace it as it extends into outer atmosphere of the Sun".
Finally, the team also released a lot of videos. The close-ups were taken at a wavelength of 705nm, for a period of 10 minutes and show the surface of the Sun at a magnification of 30 km (18 miles) for the first time. The video shows the turbulent, superheated gas that covers the entire Sun. The cell-like structures are the size of the US state of Texas and are the signature of the violent movements that transfer heat from inside the Sun to its surface. The hot solar material (creature) rises in the bright centers of the cells, cools and then sinks beneath the surface into dark stripes.
"These first images are just the beginning," said David Boboltz, director of preletterτος στο τμήμα των αστρονομικών επιστημών του NSF. “Το ηλιακό τηλεσκόπιο Inouye κατά τα πρώτα 5 χρόνια της ζωής του, θα συλλέξει περισσότερες information για τον Ήλιο μας από ό,τι όλα τα ηλιακά δεδομένα που συγκεντρώθηκαν από τότε που ο Galileo σημάδεψε με ένα τηλεσκόπιο για πρώτη φορά τον Ήλιο το 1612.”
For most of us, the Inouye Solar Telescope means just some amazing images. But for the astronomical community, it promises to usher in "a new era of solar science and a leap forward in understanding the Sun and its effects on our planet."