Aurora
Alert: The Sun Is Waking Up
Sky
viewers might get to enjoy some spectacular
Northern Lights, or aurorae, tomorrow. After a
long slumber, the Sun is waking up. Early
Sunday morning, the Sun's surface erupted and
blasted tons of plasma (ionized atoms) into
interplanetary space. That plasma is headed
our way, and when it arrives, it could create
a spectacular light show. "This
eruption is directed right at us, and is
expected to get here early in the day on
August 4th," said astronomer Leon Golub
of the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for
Astrophysics (CfA). "It's the first major
Earth-directed eruption in quite some
time." The
eruption, called a coronal mass ejection, was
caught on camera by NASA's Solar Dynamics
Observatory (SDO) - a spacecraft that launched
in February. SDO provides better-than-HD
quality views of the Sun at a variety of
wavelengths. "We
got a beautiful view of this eruption,"
said Golub. "And there might be more
beautiful views to come, if it triggers
aurorae."