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Halloween 2003 Solar Storms


Image for Halloween 2003 Solar Storms

The fall of 2003 saw the largest solar flare events ever recorded from spacecraft. Some of these events were directed towards the Earth and had a large effect on the magnetic field configuration around the Earth. These types of events pose a major hazard to astronauts, especially on interplanetary missions beyond the safety of the Earth's magnetic field and atmosphere.
Movie   ID   Title
View of the Solar System, showing the Sun, Jupiter and Saturn   10045   Coronal Mass Ejections Blast their Way Through the Solar System
CME passing Voyager   10044   Voyager Meets a Coronal Mass Ejection
A snapshot of a high-intensity time in the storm.  The bright linear structure in the upper left is an artifact created by the edge of the instrument field-of-view.   2964   IMAGE Views of the Aurora from Space
The particle flux increases dramatically over the polar cap, as they are carried Earthward along the magetic field lines.   2963   The NOAA POES Satellite Detects Record Particle Flows into the Earth's Upper Atmosphere
In the case of low solar wind pressure, the sunward side of the ionosphere is thick (the red region) and some of the atmosphere can be seen trailing off behind the planet.   2962   Computer Simulations of the Martian Atmosphere Interacting with the Solar Wind
The last big X-class flare as the active region rotates back to the far side of the Sun.   2961   Halloween Solar Storms from SOHO/EIT and SOHO/LASCO
A solar prominence appears clearly in this band, yet has no obvious counterpart visible in the 195 Angstrom band.   2960   Halloween Solar Storms from SOHO/EIT, 304 Ångstroms
The X17 event shown here launched a CME at the Earth whose <a href='http://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/vis/a000000/a002900/a002964'>impact was observed the next day by Earth-orbiting satellites</a>.   2959   Halloween Solar Storms from SOHO/EIT, 195 Ångstroms


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