WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.020 --> 00:00:04.040 [Music] 2 00:00:04.060 --> 00:00:08.110 [Music] 3 00:00:08.130 --> 00:00:12.160 At 2:50 Universal Time, 4 00:00:12.180 --> 00:00:16.170 on July 23, 2012, the sun unleashed 5 00:00:16.190 --> 00:00:20.230 an incredibly powerful coronal mass ejection, or 6 00:00:20.250 --> 00:00:24.250 CME. A CME is a huge cloud of plasma 7 00:00:24.270 --> 00:00:28.360 that bursts out of the sun's atmosphere and is held together with magnetic fields. 8 00:00:28.380 --> 00:00:32.390 An average CME travels at about 1 million miles 9 00:00:32.410 --> 00:00:36.420 per hour, and weighs around 2 trillion tons. 10 00:00:36.440 --> 00:00:40.450 On this particular Monday, however, the sun unleashed a perfect 11 00:00:40.470 --> 00:00:44.500 storm of plasma. Thanks to NASA's far-ranging 12 00:00:44.520 --> 00:00:48.610 heliophysics fleet, we have an excellent picture of the event. 13 00:00:48.630 --> 00:00:52.730 The incredibly high-resolution view of the sun, 14 00:00:52.750 --> 00:00:56.790 provided by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, or SDO, 15 00:00:56.810 --> 00:01:00.890 revealed the beginning of the eruption in several different wavelengths of ultraviolet 16 00:01:00.910 --> 00:01:05.070 light. [Music] 17 00:01:05.090 --> 00:01:09.250 NASA's twin STEREO spacecraft, orbiting the sun ahead and behind 18 00:01:09.270 --> 00:01:13.260 Earth, gave a similar view from alternate perspectives. 19 00:01:13.280 --> 00:01:17.350 [Music] 20 00:01:17.370 --> 00:01:21.410 The STEREO satellites also carry coronagraphs, which block the bright 21 00:01:21.430 --> 00:01:25.470 solar disk, to make the fainter extended solar atmosphere, or corona, 22 00:01:25.490 --> 00:01:29.540 visible. As a result, they were able 23 00:01:29.560 --> 00:01:33.590 to image the actual CME as it left the sun. 24 00:01:33.610 --> 00:01:37.630 The CME headed in the direction of the STEREO A spacecraft 25 00:01:37.650 --> 00:01:41.700 at an astonishing 6.7 million miles an hour. 26 00:01:41.720 --> 00:01:45.750 As the CME arrived at 27 00:01:45.770 --> 00:01:49.810 STEREO A, the coronagraph and STEREO's wider-field 28 00:01:49.830 --> 00:01:53.870 heliospheric imagers were pummeled by high-energy particles, 29 00:01:53.890 --> 00:01:57.930 which appear like snow in the imagery. The joint ESA 30 00:01:57.950 --> 00:02:02.110 and NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO, 31 00:02:02.130 --> 00:02:06.290 that has been observing the sun since 1995, 32 00:02:06.310 --> 00:02:10.320 captured footage of the CME in both of its coronagraphs, which overlap 33 00:02:10.340 --> 00:02:14.370 their fields of view. All of these 34 00:02:14.390 --> 00:02:18.400 data allow computer models to reconstruct the full shape and 35 00:02:18.420 --> 00:02:22.450 expansion of the CME. The main event is preceded by 36 00:02:22.470 --> 00:02:26.480 a few smaller CMES, one of which was Earth-directed. 37 00:02:26.500 --> 00:02:30.500 It is immediately clear how much larger and faster 38 00:02:30.520 --> 00:02:34.530 the July 23rd CME was, as it blasted towards 39 00:02:34.550 --> 00:02:38.550 STEREO A. NASA's fleet of heliophysics 40 00:02:38.570 --> 00:02:42.710 spacecraft, watching the sun from all sides, improves our understanding, 41 00:02:42.730 --> 00:02:46.730 and enables predictions of these solar outbursts. 42 00:02:46.750 --> 00:02:50.770 [Music] [Beeping] 43 00:02:50.790 --> 00:03:01.995 [Beeping]