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Aya
01-28-2006, 11:40 PM
The Auroras from space (http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/Newsroom/NewImages/images.php3?img_id=17165)

From space, the aurora is a crown of light that circles each of Earth’s poles. The IMAGE satellite captured this view of the aurora australis (southern lights) on September 11, 2005, four days after a record-setting solar flare sent plasma—an ionized gas of protons and electrons—flying towards the Earth. The ring of light that the solar storm generated over Antarctica glows green in the ultraviolet part of the spectrum, shown in this image. The IMAGE observations of the aurora are overlaid onto NASA’s satellite-based Blue Marble image. From the Earth’s surface, the ring would appear as a curtain of light shimmering across the night sky.

Like all solar storms, the September storm distorted the shape of the magnetic field that surrounds the Earth. Without buffeting from the solar wind (charged particles like protons and electrons that are ejected from the Sun), the Earth’s magnetic field would look something like a plump doughnut, with the North and South poles forming the slender hole in the center. In reality, the nearly constant solar winds flatten the space side of the “doughnut” into a long tail. The amount of distortion changes when solar storms, such as the flare on September 7, send stronger winds towards the Earth. Changes to the magnetic field release fast-moving particles, which flow with charged particles from the Sun towards the center of the “doughnut” at the Earth’s poles. As the particles sink into the atmosphere, they collide with oxygen and nitrogen, lighting the sky with Nature’s version of neon lights, the aurora.

Though scientists knew that the aurora were caused by charged particles from the Sun and their interaction with the Earth’s magnetic field, they had no way to measure the interaction until NASA launched the Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration (IMAGE) satellite in 2000. The satellite’s mission was to collect data that would allow scientists to study the structure and dynamics of the Earth’s magnetic field for the first time. Designed to operate for two years, IMAGE sent its last data to Earth in December 2005 after a highly successful five-year mission.

Since 2000, IMAGE has provided insight into how the Earth’s powerful magnetic field protects the planet from solar winds. Without the shield the magnetic field provides, the upper atmosphere would evaporate into space under the influence of solar winds. IMAGE has shown scientists what sort of changes the magnetic field undertakes as it diverts solar winds from the Earth. For a summary of the discoveries that IMAGE has made possible, see IMAGE Discovers.

Who needs fancy multi-million dollar special effects when you have solar winds and a magnetic field? ;)

The_Maker
01-28-2006, 11:48 PM
Wow O_O

That IS COOL...

Looks like something out of Star Wars :P

pixels
01-28-2006, 11:55 PM
looks like we've been hit by a photon cannon ;)

Aya
01-28-2006, 11:57 PM
Or SG-1 shot another asteroid through the Earth via hyperspace. :P

hammocksleeper
01-29-2006, 12:24 AM
aya, what the fuck are you doing here? :P

GrassDragon
01-29-2006, 12:29 AM
aya, what the fuck are you doing here? :P
That's what I said.

Aurora is cooler from space.

TinyDancer
01-29-2006, 12:35 AM
Wicked sweet. How cool would it have been to be the first person to see that?

BlackHawk
01-29-2006, 12:36 AM
Wow, that IS really cool. Great link Aya!

Moser
01-29-2006, 12:38 AM
That is amazing. I am fascinated by anything in space.

Aya
01-29-2006, 12:58 AM
aya, what the fuck are you doing here? :P

Because BlizzForums is down and I refuse to use their crappy backup forum.

Iron/nickel core FTW!

Schwitzer
01-29-2006, 1:15 AM
It's nice to know we're the "fall-back forum".

Greyscale
01-29-2006, 1:16 AM
It's nice to know we're the "fall-back forum".

Yeah, thats kinda what I was thinking. :P

That image is crazy cool.

pixels
01-29-2006, 1:18 AM
Heh. I fell back to here, and then just sort of realized that I was actually falling upwards :)

Battlecruiser
01-29-2006, 1:19 AM
looks like we've been hit by a photon cannon ;)
Uh oh. The Protoss are coming.

Dark_Viper
01-29-2006, 1:20 AM
whoa.. love that.. great find.. and welcome to our.. humble forum

Aya
01-29-2006, 1:38 AM
Welcome? I've been here since 2004! :P

I've always had a tab on Firefox open to WB, I just never had the chance to post much.

Demon_Child
01-29-2006, 3:07 AM
Welcome? I've been here since 2004! :P

I've always had a tab on Firefox open to WB, I just never really cared much to post.

Fixed it for you. ;)

Aya
01-29-2006, 3:52 AM
Oh poo on you, DC. :P

<3 ;)

EvilEggCracker
01-29-2006, 4:27 AM
That pic looks really cool. I didnt read the artical but I looked at the picture...it looks almost unreal...

Leosam096
01-29-2006, 7:07 AM
Now thats something interesting going on outside our world. :smile:

SHISHKABOB
01-29-2006, 5:27 PM
Yes. Wow. Amazing. These things happen all the time. I saw about 5 or 6 on a vacation to Canada. All of them spectacular. I even saw a huge one down here in southern PA. Auroras are one of the coolest space phenomena ever Period

DragonPaladin
01-29-2006, 5:43 PM
It's nice to know we're the "fall-back forum".

Well, at least, we're second in some people's minds.

But sweet, that's cool :D maybe..>_>...maybe aliens have found us...

Moser
01-29-2006, 8:40 PM
Yes. Wow. Amazing. These things happen all the time. I saw about 5 or 6 on a vacation to Canada. All of them spectacular. I even saw a huge one down here in southern PA. Auroras are one of the coolest space phenomena ever Period

Yes they happen all the time in Canada, but space and Canada are quite a distance apart. =P It's more interesting seeing it from space. :)

Darmago
01-29-2006, 8:56 PM
hrm... I think I'll make a wallpaper from this...

Basan
01-30-2006, 11:14 AM
Or SG-1 shot another asteroid through the Earth via hyperspace. :P

Oh my... not another SG-1 fan(atic). :P And I tought to be the single one 'round here. :smirk:

Heh. I fell back to here, and then just sort of realized that I was actually falling upwards :)

*Rofl* Kind of what was thinking... but you beat me to it. :bonk:

Welcome? I've been here since 2004! :P

I've always had a tab on Firefox open to WB, I just never had the chance to post much.

/me briefly compares post count * :_poke:
Being here and not being active counts almost the same to me. But hey, that just might be 'hissy' me... ;)

That's the same as me saying that hadn't the chance to post (much) on BF... which I've been doing for a while now, btw. :angel:

And here (http://www.warboards.org/showpost.php?p=265560&postcount=1) you can get your handy, dandy WB's toolbar in order to prevent you forgetting to drop by more often... just not to mention the neato search plugin (http://www.warboards.org/showpost.php?p=223183&postcount=1).
Somehow, I doubt if BF had pulled similars 'till this date. :) (That way, I'd sure remember more to keep on track with it's SC's mapping section, which gets 'round a monthly visit from me.)

Add: Almost forgot what drove me here in the 1st place... I'm gonna save that image for sure, perhaps to make a nice avy with it.

loads_of_fun
01-30-2006, 12:03 PM
it looks like the life force (in FF7) trying
to stop an invisiable version of meteor

The_Maker
01-30-2006, 1:45 PM
My gosh Basan,
That post is most likely your largest in terms of smileys o_O

Anyhow, back on topic folks ;)

Protoss_Honor
01-30-2006, 5:11 PM
That is UberAwesome. It looks like some sort of Temporal distortion. Maybe a tear in the fabric of space. Or just the Aurora lights.

Nickodemus
01-30-2006, 5:44 PM
That is amazing. I am fascinated by anything in space.


I'm just facinated by anything in MY space, but hey thats cool too.

Basan
01-31-2006, 4:49 AM
My gosh Basan,
That post is most likely your largest in terms of smileys o_O

Anyhow, back on topic folks ;)


Merely trying to shun other members with my 1337n335 usage fo smillies... :rolleyes:
/me self slaps to prevent further comfy spammage *
Clearly by that remark of mine, you've just arrived to the conclusion that I didn't know what was doin' back there at the time being. ;)

Demon_Child
01-31-2006, 6:45 AM
it looks like the life force (in FF7) trying
to stop an invisiable version of meteor

I think you are refering to the "Lifestream" as the mystical force that helped prevent the Meteor from crashing down on Midgar. :)