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SOLAR SCIENCE
Image of sun shows two areas of sunspots, one arriving and one leaving
by Staff Writers
Greenbelt, Md. (UPI) Nov 15, 2013


disclaimer: image is for illustration purposes only

NASA has released an image of the sun showing two sunspots -- one "coming" and one "going" -- both the size of Jupiter, astronomers say.

One, dubbed active region 1890, produced considerable solar activity in the past weeks including several mid-sized and significant flares, but has almost rotated off completely and will soon be out of sight from Earth, they said.

The newer active region, 1897, came into view Monday and is now making its way across the Earth-side of the sun, NASA reported.

An active region can contain one or more sunspots, astronomers said.

Increased numbers of sunspot active regions and their associate flares are quite common at the moment, as the sun approaches the peak of its normal 11-year activity cycle, constantly tracked since the cycle was discovered in 1843.

During the sun's peak activity, called solar maximum, it is normal to record many flares a day, the astronomers said.

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Sun's Magnetic Field Poised to Reverse Its Polarity
Stanford CA (SPX) Nov 13, 2013
Every 11 years, the sun undergoes a complete makeover when the polarity of its magnetic field - its magnetic north and south - flips. The effects of this large-scale event ripple throughout the solar system. Although the exact internal mechanism that drives the shift is not entirely understood, researchers at Stanford's Wilcox Solar Observatory have monitored the sun's magnetic field on a ... read more


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