Nasa video shows massive solar flare that is the equivalent of millions of 100-megaton atomic bombs

The X-class solar flare is the biggest one recorded this year

Jack Simpson
Friday 13 March 2015 11:54 GMT
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The solar flare that erupted on Wednesday
The solar flare that erupted on Wednesday (Nasa)

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Images have been released by Nasa showing the Sun’s biggest solar flare of 2015.

In the incredible footage taken by Nasa’s Solar Dynamics Observatory on Wednesday, an X-class solar flare, the strongest category of solar flare, is captured.

Solar flares create powerful bursts of radiation from the Sun’s surface. Although this radiation is unable to penetrate through Earth’s atmosphere, it is able to disrupt the area in which satellite signals travel.

Solar flares occur when magnetic energy builds up in the sun’s atmosphere and is quickly released.

Radiation is then emitted across the electromagnetic spectrum, from soft X-rays to gamma rays.

The latest solar flare is rated as an X-class flare, the most powerful and is said to have the same energy as millions of hydrogen bombs.

The flare has already led to one hour-long blackout, with the US Space Weather Prediction Centre in Boulder, Colorado confirming that some high-frequency radio communications went down on Wednesday.

More disruption to satellite signals and communications are expected today and over the weekend.

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