STEREO Captures Sun's Eruption
10.06.09

> Click to view larger image
> Click to view movie from STEREO
The twin STEREO spacecraft (called “Behind” and “Ahead” denoting their relative positions in space), now almost 120 degrees apart,
captured this large and dramatic prominence eruption over about a 30-hour period between Sept. 26-27, 2009. Prominences, called filaments when they are viewed against the surface of the Sun, are clouds of cooler gas suspended above the Sun’s surface by magnetic forces. This erupting prominence was large enough that both spacecraft were able to observe it for hours on end, one of the first times that has occurred.

> Click to view larger image
> Click to view second movie from STEREO
From the Behind perspective (on left) the long filament, darker than the Sun’s surface, can be seen rising up and then
breaking away, spreading out above most of the Sun’s surface. As seen from the Ahead spacecraft (right), the filament is seen in
profile and is therefore called a prominence. The very large cloud lifts up, breaks away, and heads out into space. This is one of the
most spectacular eruptive prominences either SOHO or STEREO have observed.
High Resolution Images:
> STEREO project site page