NASA Releases Incredible New Footage of the Sun Spewing Stuff Into Space

Hey, at least when people watch my bodily functions, they don't have to worry about going blind.
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Last weekend NASA released this footage taken by the agency’s newest sun observer, the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS. The video shows a highly impressive coronal mass ejection (CME) in which giant clouds of solar material are expelled into space—kind of like a burp, but way more majestic.

Filming a CME eruption is a special feat for IRIS; the observatory has to decide what part of the sun to observe at least a day ahead of time, so capturing impressive footage like this involves a certain amount of luck. IRIS managed to immortalize a solar eruption shooting sun-stuff into space at approximately 1.5 million miles per hour, depicted in a field of view five Earths wide and seven and a half Earths tall.

(via Discover, image via NASA Goddard)


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