NASA releases first ever 360 degree image of the Sun

February 07, 2011 06:13 pm | Updated November 28, 2021 09:27 pm IST - London

An unidentified employee of the Stefanik Observatory in Prague uses a projection shield to show the partial solar eclipse visible in the Czech capital during the morning on Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2011.  The partial Sun eclipse started over the Czech Republic at about 08:00 CET and it will last until 10:50. In the culminating phase, up to 80 percent of the solar disc was obscured by the silhouette of the Moon passing between it and the Earth. (AP Photo/CTK, Michal Kamaryt)  Slovakia Out

An unidentified employee of the Stefanik Observatory in Prague uses a projection shield to show the partial solar eclipse visible in the Czech capital during the morning on Tuesday, Jan. 4, 2011. The partial Sun eclipse started over the Czech Republic at about 08:00 CET and it will last until 10:50. In the culminating phase, up to 80 percent of the solar disc was obscured by the silhouette of the Moon passing between it and the Earth. (AP Photo/CTK, Michal Kamaryt) Slovakia Out

NASA has released the first ever image that shows the entire sun in a 360-degree view. The Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (Stereo) mission launched its two satellites in 2006. They have gradually been drifting apart — one in front of the Earth in its orbit, the other lagging behind. NASA said on Sunday that the spacecraft had arrived at points that put the Sun directly between them.

The spacecraft moved either side of the Sun to establish observing positions that should return remarkable new information about our star.

The mission is studying the Sun’s great explosive events that hurl billions of tonnes of charged particles at Earth — events that can disrupt power grids and satellites.

These Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs), as they are known, can also be hazardous to astronauts in space.

"By being away from the Sun-Earth line, you can look back at the space between the Sun and the Earth and see any of these clouds, these coronal mass ejections that are thrown out of the Sun and are coming our way — you can even see these things passing over the Earth. Those are the key to what Stereo’s all about,” Prof Richard Harrison from the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK, and an investigator on the project, told the BBC.

The two spacecraft will continue to move further apart, heading toward each other on the opposite side of the Sun from the Earth. This means that the full view provided by the two craft will fade, leaving a growing region behind the Sun — on the Earth side — that they do not see.

However, the Solar Dynamics Observatory, launched in Earth orbit a year ago, will remain fixed on the Sun, providing the missing piece of the puzzle.

Harrison believes achieving an all—round—view of the Sun will be key to understanding what drives the complex processes in the Sun.

"You really see it with these widely separated regions of the Sun’s atmosphere that are connected magnetically, showing activity at the same time, or causing activity somewhere else,” he said.

"These things stress to us that you can’t really study the Sun in great detail just by looking at a bit of it, any more than you could understand the brain by looking at a bit of it or study the Earth’s polar regions by looking at the equator. You need this global view to really piece the jigsaw puzzle together,” he added.

Scientists suspect that activity on the Sun can on occasions go global, with eruptions on opposite sides of the Sun triggering and feeding off of one another. With the Stereo craft in their new positions, this phenomenon can now be studied.

Stereo is already being used to improve ‘space weather’ forecasts for airlines, power companies, satellite operators, and other customers.

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