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STEREO Coronal Mass Ejection: From the EUVI to HI-2

This movie collects imagery from SOHO and STEREO-A of a coronal mass ejection (CME) during January of 2007. The instruments in this view, from left to right, are STEREO/HI-1, STEREO/HI-2, SOHO/LASCO/C3, SOHO/LASCO/C2, and STEREO/EUVI. The Heliospheric Imager, HI-2, shows some of the tail of comet McNaught. The dark trapezoidal shape on the left edge of the image in HI-2 is the Earth occulter which will block out the disk of the Earth when it moves into view (since the planet will appear so bright as to saturate the detectors). Due to ongoing work with the STEREO coronagraphs, COR1 and COR2, the SOHO/LASCO coronagraphs are used for this movie. The blue Sun in the center of the coronagraphs is STEREO/EUVI ultraviolet images.

There is a 22 hour gap in the data coverage for HI-2 which creates the appearance of a jump in the playback.

These are not standard images but are called `running difference' images which highlight changes in the view. White pixels correspond to increases in brightness, while dark pixels reflect a decrease in brightness, with respect to the immediately previous image.

'Running differencing' generates some unusual effects. For example, the mottled background is created by the motion of the stars through the field-of-view as the spacecraft pointing direction slowly changes (the Andromeda galaxy is the oblong 'smudge' near the upper left corner). The planets Venus (right edge of HI-2) and Mercury are visible (near center of HI-1), their column of pixels saturated due to their brightness.

  • STEREO: Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory
  • SOHO: SOlar Heliospheric Observatory
  • LASCO: Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph
  • EUVI: Extreme UltraViolet Imager


  • This movie shows a pair of CMEs moving out from the Sun and into the view of HI-1 and HI-2.    This movie shows a pair of CMEs moving out from the Sun and into the view of HI-1 and HI-2.
    Duration: 4.0 seconds
    Available formats:
      1280x720 (30 fps) MPEG-2   10 MB
      1280x720 (15 fps) MPEG-4   2 MB
      1280x720 (30 fps) Frames
      320x180     JPEG         38 KB
      640x360 (600 fps) QUICKTIME 3 MB
    How to play our movies


    This opening view has imagery from the instruments (from left to right): STEREO/HI-1, STEREO/HI-2, SOHO/LASCO/C3, SOHO/LASCO/C2, and STEREO/EUVI.  Streams from the tail of comet McNaught radiate out across the lower right of HI-2, which is the leftmost image.    This opening view has imagery from the instruments (from left to right): STEREO/HI-1, STEREO/HI-2, SOHO/LASCO/C3, SOHO/LASCO/C2, and STEREO/EUVI. Streams from the tail of comet McNaught radiate out across the lower right of HI-2, which is the leftmost image.

    Available formats:
      2560 x 1440     TIFF 7 MB
      320 x 180         JPEG 38 KB


    The CME (bright region on right side of the middle square image) has moved from the LASCO imagers into the view of HI-1.    The CME (bright region on right side of the middle square image) has moved from the LASCO imagers into the view of HI-1.

    Available formats:
      2560 x 1440     TIFF 7 MB
      320 x 180         JPEG 38 KB


    The CME has moved from the view of HI-1 into view of HI-2.    The CME has moved from the view of HI-1 into view of HI-2.

    Available formats:
      2560 x 1440     TIFF 7 MB
      320 x 180         JPEG 38 KB


    As the CME moves out, the leading edge appears bright while the trailing edge appears dark in difference images.    As the CME moves out, the leading edge appears bright while the trailing edge appears dark in difference images.

    Available formats:
      2560 x 1440     TIFF 7 MB
      320 x 180         JPEG 38 KB
      160 x 80           PNG 18 KB
      80 x 40             PNG   4 KB


    The front of the CME shock expands and dissipates as it interacts with the existing heliospheric environment.    The front of the CME shock expands and dissipates as it interacts with the existing heliospheric environment.

    Available formats:
      2560 x 1440     TIFF 7 MB
      320 x 180         JPEG 37 KB


    The remains of the CMEs passge fades away.    The remains of the CMEs passge fades away.

    Available formats:
      320 x 180         JPEG 37 KB
      2560 x 1440     TIFF 7 MB

    Animation Number:3406
    Animator:Tom Bridgman (SVS) (Lead)
    Completed:2007-02-26
    Scientists:Therese Kucera (NASA/GSFC)
     Russ Howard (NRL)
     Angelos Vourlidas (NRL)
     Michael Kaiser (NASA/GSFC)
    Instruments:SOHO/LASCO/C2
     SOHO/LASCO/C3
     STEREO
     STEREO-A/EUVI
     STEREO-A/HI-1
     STEREO-A/HI-2
    Data Collected:2007-01-24 to 2007-01-27
    Series:STEREO Post-Launch
    Keywords:
    SVS >> Coronal Mass Ejection
    SVS >> HDTV
    SVS >> Heliosphere
    SVS >> Sun
    GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Sun-earth Interactions
    GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Sun-earth Interactions >> Solar Activity >> Coronal Properties
    GCMD >> Location >> Corona
    SVS >> Space Weather
    SVS >> Coronagraph
     
     
    Please give credit for this item to
    NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio


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