NASA Solar Satellite's First Sun Images 103
coondoggie writes "NASA today showed off the amazing first pictures of the Sun taken from its 6,800lb Solar Dynamics Observatory flying at an orbit 22,300 miles above Earth. The first images show a variety of activity NASA says provide never-before-seen detail of material streaming outward and away from sunspots. Others show extreme close-ups of activity on the sun's surface. The spacecraft also has made the first high-resolution measurements of solar flares in a broad range of extreme ultraviolet wavelengths."
Rather Large Image for the Article (Score:5, Informative)
I didn't see a link in the article, but here's the original NASA press release [nasa.gov].
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The previous poster wasn't bemoaning that the picture was too small. The complaint (or amusement?) was that it was scaled for display by the browser instead of being a thumbnail-sized picture pre-scaled on the server or on the page designer's workstation.
The difference, for those who don't know a thing about web design, is that a proper thumbnail is a small picture with a small file size, possibly with a link to a larger picture for details. Scaling a 4096 by 4096 picture in the browser means every page vie
Link to SDO? (Score:4, Informative)
Almost all of the links on that article refer back to crap at network world -- I'm still trying to figure out what this link is at the bottom, that claims to be "Solar Dynamics Observatory", but seems to just be a 404 to : sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/images/site/icon.ico
(There's no 'images' directory on that server at the top level)
I'd just appreciate it if someone were going to link to our servers that they didn't link to crap.
If you want movies, see one of :
More images -- 4096 x 4096 stills (Score:2)
Lockheed Martin (AIA PI institution) has some of the 4096 x 4096 images available:
I have no idea why they didn't match the same color tables for the 304/171/19[35] images as SOHO and STEREO.
A Link to Several Movies (Score:5, Informative)
I found that this link [nasa.gov] provides access to several high quality movies that downloaded quite quickly. They are very interesting to watch.
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Careful! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Careful! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Careful! (Score:4, Funny)
if you look at the article directly, you'll burn out your retinas!
I don't think any /. readers will be affected.
Predict the weather? (Score:4, Insightful)
I do not know what everyone else thinks but I think that sounds pretty exciting. I can see it having a huge impact on airline and space travel.
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"space weather" is a term used to refer to solar output fluctuation so the layman can understand it. It has more to do with radio and electronic systems on earth and in space than it does to earth-bound weather.
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I don't think not being able to predict space weather usually has a huge impact on airlines, so I'm not sure how being able to predict it would.
Re:Predict the weather? (Score:4, Informative)
Depends on the flight path. Flights that go to high latitudes (great cirle routes over the north pole) sometimes lose communications due to (currently unpredicted) solar events. They are not allowed to fly without communications, so they have to divert to more southerly routes to restore comm. Of course this takes more time and fuel -- perhaps even forcing a landing at a closer airport.
Accurate predictions of solar events would allow the airline industry to plan better.
Airlines == Polar flights (Score:4, Informative)
The issue is that when you're flying long distances, you have the choice of either flying over the poles, or refueling mid-way. If there's a solar storm going on, everyone's exposed to a fair amount of radiation in a polar flight, and it might affect some of their instruments. Most airlines will take the refueling stop if there's a storm.
The radiation likely won't be enough to affect the average passenger, but it's the pilots who get to decide, and it's the flight crews that are exposed to radiation over and over again on these trips. ... but it'll be more important when we move to GPS for air traffic control -- GPS doesn't work when there's too much noise in that frequency band. This would mean that the FAA would have to fall back to radar, and all of the benefits they're claiming for their new system would be wiped out. (ie, need to leave more space around planes, so you can't pack the airspace as well)
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It's the same thing to X-Ray machines - the level of radiation for the patient is important, but negligible over its life time, while the doctors/nurses that tend to the installation are much well protected, yet the level of radiation over their life time might be signifiant.
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From the article "Such events [Coronal Mass Ejections] can expose astronauts to deadly particle doses, can disable satellites, cause power grid failures on Earth and disrupt communications." The effects of such an events seem beyond mankind's ability to mitigate beyond a simple duck-and-cover.
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Did you notice (Score:2)
That little thing in the lower left side of the sun. It is a perfect rectangle. It couldn't be made in nature. It must be a door!
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and for those of you that have, I hear they're going to release it in braille too.
Video (Score:4, Informative)
There's some absolutely awesome video from SDO here [cnn.com]
Wow.
SB
Re:Video (Score:5, Informative)
Better article [nasa.gov]
This is incredible stuff. The CNN author called it "Hubble for the sun" and that's exactly what it is.
SB
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Heh! I give it about two days before the solar prominence flare video is up on youtube, with appropriate music. If I had such talents (and time, could probably figure it out) I'd post something along those lines myself. That video is beautiful.
I wonder if Ebert would consider things like this to be "art"?
Myself, I think reality (nature, whatever) produces better art than anything humans will ever accomplish, both in beauty and in elegance... and certainly one-off works :=)
SB
Hubble for the sun? (Score:2)
But it's in focus, without needing a servicing mission.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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After knowing that the LHC has total a raw data rate of about 1 GB per second, and about 15 PB a year, nothing can impress me me that much anymore...
Re:Holy Amounts of data! (Score:4, Informative)
Sorry, you can't see the design documents! :-P
Flight operations for the spacecraft is at GSFC, while instrument operations can be done at both GSFC and at the science operations centers.
Science data is stored temporarily ( up to 30 days) at the dedicated ground stations at White Sands. The data is transferred in close to real-time (OC-3 lines for HMI/AIA, DS-3 for EVE) from there to each of the science instrument data centers (LASP for EVE, and JSOC at Stanford for HMI and AIA).
So, in this case it is the science teams (not NASA) that must store and process massive amounts of data. Perhaps obviously, none of the science data processing is done at GSFC (only engineering data).
Actually, you can find some documents online for HMI/AIA by searching Google for "jsoc sdp".
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MODIS, eh? Earth science (specifically, the EOS-DIS) gets an order of magnitude more money than what we have to work with in solar science.
As for data storage, there's actually more than one system Besides what was already mentioned of the store and forward at the ground station, there's then the 'SDO JSOC' (Joint Science Operations Center) which will provide storage for AIA and HMI ... but they'll be pushing the level 0 to tape after only a few days. They won't be archiving level 1 for AIA, and will have
6800 lbs? (Score:4, Funny)
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Nerds (Score:4, Funny)
Normal guy: How much do you think that chick weighs?
Slashdot guy: How much do you think that satellite weighs?
Sounds about right.
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Re:Nerds (Score:5, Insightful)
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Looks like a stay m found its way into your post.
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And an r escaped from mine. Those devious consonants!
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Normal guy: How much do you think that chick weighs? ... Mmmhhh... chickeeenn...!
Me: About 1200g?
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I'm glad you posted this sarcastic response to what you regard as a insignificant piece of data in an article about an incredible new piece of hardware that's already giving us new insights about our star. Your comment truly makes reading this website worthwhile.
Then some idiot moderator posted you insightful...
You know, some of us actually might find that piece of data interesting. Just because you do not, is not sufficient reason to criticize the author(s) of the article. Your p
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*grin*
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On a related note, I tried to search "6800 lbs at 22300 miles" on Google- the first result was your post
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Whoa. But... (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently iTunes has morphed into a unit of scale. What is that in Library of Congresses?
Re:Whoa. But... (Score:4, Insightful)
Wait a minute... 1.5TB/d = 500,000 iTunes/d??
This would mean that iTunes has only 3MB? The size of a song...
OMG, those complete retard mean MP3s!!
I bet they refer to MP3 players as “iPods”...
This is even dumber than not knowing the difference between $0.02 and 0.02 cent!
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I heard a valid reason from Dean Pesnell (SDO Project Scientist) -- they wanted to compare it to a compressed media, rather than using units of 'library of congress'. Either someone misheard the quote, or someone screwed up their line, as it was supposed to be something like 'downloading 500k songs from iTunes a day'.
For some reason, they weren't willing to go with the PornYear [theregister.co.uk] metric.
(and to the other commenter who said they should've said 'MP3' -- iTunes uses AAC, not MP3, and if you said file format onl
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And god knows that people who read science news cannot possibly comprehend how much a terabyte is.
Torrent Please (Score:4, Insightful)
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What would be super awesome though would be a torrent
OR, posting all the huge videos in a torrent so we could get it faster.
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Sadly, at this time they can only post what they have ready for public consumption. Stay tuned, there are sure to be years worth of even better treats to come :-)
SB
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Well, this is my first attempt at a torrent; hope this works
http://www.seedpeer.com/details/3024437/SDO.html [seedpeer.com]
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I am seeding! I imagine until we get a lot of peers direct download from the websites will be better
So, if you download from the web, please seed them :)
http://sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/firstlight/ [nasa.gov]
http://aia.lmsal.com/public/firstlight.html [lmsal.com]
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http://aia.lmsal.com/public/firstlight.html [lmsal.com]
In the "Movies" section.
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Even if someone made it, you have to go through hoops to be allowed to use peer-to-peer anything at NASA.
I know there's a few multi-GB earth science data sets being distributed using torrents, but when I brought up peer-to-peer anything 2 years ago, before I was working on the data distribution system for SDO, I kept getting push back -- the files are too small to be efficient (~16MB each image); there's too many files to track (with all of the processed forms of the data, we'll be tracking over 400k files
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That's why I downloaded everything at home, and am seeding from there. Of course it's only a measly FIOS connection. Downloading from the NASA and LMSAL sites is probably going to be faster in any case.
Aren't we at a solar minimum? (Score:4, Interesting)
"During 2008-2009 NASA scientists noted that the Sun is undergoing a "deep solar minimum," stating: "There were no sunspots observed on 266 of [2008's] 366 days (73%). Prompted by these numbers, some observers suggested that the solar cycle had hit bottom in 2008. Sunspot counts for 2009 have dropped even lower. As of September 14, there were no sunspots on 206 of the year's 257 days (80%). It adds up to one inescapable conclusion: "We're experiencing a very deep solar minimum," says solar physicist Dean Pesnell of the Goddard Space Flight Center. "This is the quietest sun we've seen in almost a century," agrees sunspot expert David Hathaway of the National Space Science and Technology Center NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center.
from wikipedia quoting legitimate sources http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_minimum [wikipedia.org]
I'm all for space exploration, but the TFA should at least mention the solar minimum. And isn't http://solarstormwatch.com/ [solarstormwatch.com] more interestin' anyway?
Cut to the chase! Hit first base! (Score:2, Interesting)
Girls(I hope)! Guys!
These videos are awesome. For once, don't bother with the article, just feast your eyes on extraordinary false-color footage of the source* of our life:
http://www.nasa.gov/mov/445831main_Alan-1-FirstSunImageandFootageH264.mov [nasa.gov]
http://www.nasa.gov/mov/445834main_Alan-4-Larger-activeRegion-H264.mov [nasa.gov]
Others are available here:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/sdo/news/briefing-materials-20100421.html [nasa.gov]
These are some of the most beautiful works of art I've ever seen, and I studied Fine Art for ove
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What particularly struck me was the very "organic" looking cell structure
There's not much information Granule (solar physics) [wikipedia.org] but it will give you a start on learning more.
(Solar astronomy is one of my hobbies, so I knew what to search for. Enjoy!)
SB
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Re:Cut to the chase! Hit first base! (Score:5, Insightful)
My pleasure!
Something else to think about - you spoke of energy levels - just one of those granules is about the size of the Earth*, and the average temperature at the surface of the sun is around 6000 Kelvin. If the earth was magically transported there, everything on the surface would evaporate instantly, and the oceans would boil completely away in a matter of minutes. The rest of the planet might last a few days, at the most.
We humans, with our fusion weapons, think we have "harnessed the fury of the stars" while in reality we've barely touched upon the energy levels that are common everywhere - and our sun is just a "middle class" star in terms of energy levels. There are phenomenon out there that make our sun look like a spark in a nuclear explosion...
The universe is both beautiful, and terrible beyond imagination.
Welcome to astronomy :) One of the greatest pleasures I find is in expanding minds...
* roughly; the sun is about a million miles in diameter, and granule size varies. It's a close enough approximation, however.
SB
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List of large stars [wikipedia.org]
Largest star currently known [wikipedia.org]
Earth compared to planets/stars [wikipedia.org]
Cya around space cowboy!
Network World? (Score:2)
Now why the hell does a story about new pictures from NASA link to Network World instead of, oh, say, NASA?
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It's your basic blog spam -- slashdot user 'coondoggie [slashdot.org]' submits an article written by 'Michael Cooney'.
Look at the rest of his submissions -- all just links back to Network World. Maybe he's trying to make up for the loss of Roland [slashdot.org]. (Although, Roland got better in his submissions)
Oh cool, first light, let me see....I'm BLIND!!!! (Score:2)
My eyes! My eyes!
Re:Oh cool, first light, let me see....I'm BLIND!! (Score:2)
They've booby trapped their sun somehow!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWYt8af7C3U [youtube.com]
(start about 5:30 in)
The detail is amazing (Score:5, Funny)
If you look closely, you can see the flag that Louis Armstrong planted on the surface.
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Obama politics (Score:2, Funny)
Take remote pictures of it from an unmanned observatory.
-Under George W. we would have landed there!
Wait (Score:1)
super hd video at nasa (Score:2)
Check out the full-screen mpegs here: http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/Gallery/SDOFirstLight.html [nasa.gov]
So with this camera (Score:1)
Thats hot! (Score:2)
No really.. it is. Awesome.
Vid is on youtube also..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YShVRLSJ-7c [youtube.com]
Slashdot advice (Score:2)
I know it goes without saying here, but "Do Not Look Directly at the Article for any amount of time!"
Remember kids (Score:2)
don't look directly at a picture of the Sun.