 |  |  |  |  |
| |  | |  | |
 |
Services Subscribe
|  |  |  |  | | | The Sun now

Image from the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI)
The Sun's visible surface today.
LOOK for small dark patches, the sunspots. They often come in pairs or
groups and they are scenes of intense magnetic fields. You can sometimes
relate the sunspots to very hot and stormy regions in the atmosphere
above, seen in the ultraviolet (EIT) images. Each sunspot gradually moves
across the visible surface as the Sun rotates. From far left to far
right takes it two weeks. Latest images from other SOHO instruments
Last update: 9 April 2002 | |
|  | More about... SOHO overviewRelated articles Safety tips for observing the SunHow the Sun affects us on EarthWhat is a SOHO/EIT CCD ‘bakeout’?In depth ESA's SOHO science websiteRelated links SOHO homepageHot shots from SOHOBest of SOHO imagesSOHO and space weatherWhat is a 'telemetry keyhole'?
|