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Did a comet hit cause an explosion on the sun?

This amazing video from the SOHO mission (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) shows a sun-diving comet hitting the solar surface on October 1, 2011 and unexpectedly a huge explosion occurs shortly after. Are the two events related? Probably not, but solar scientists don鈥檛 know for sure. The region where the CME originated was on the opposite side of the Sun from the comet hit, so that is very great distance. Scientists say there is no known mechanism for comets to trigger a CME.

, named SOHO-2143, was just discovered on Sept. 30 by an amateur astronomer.

See below for SDO鈥檚 look at two solar flares which also occurred on October 1, showing how events on the Sun can be related.

The two solar flares erupted within a very short period of time, and originated from two active regions, the super-huge 1302 region, and the newer 1305. From SDO, scientists have learned that certain events are connected with each other 鈥 in this case active regions far apart can be linked together by magnetic fields and can erupt one after another. Called 鈥渆ntangled eruptions,鈥 these two active regions far apart but linked by magnetic fields can explode one after another, with disturbances spreading around the stellar surface domino-style. This appears to be the latest example.

The part of the eruption centered on sunspot 1305 hurled a coronal mass ejection toward Earth. The relatively slow-moving (500 km/s) cloud is expected to reach our planet on Oct. 4th or 5th, possibly causing geomagnetic storms when it arrives. High-latitude sky watchers should be alert for auroras

In this second video segment you can also observe the October 1, 2011 eclipse 鈥 where Earth is moving in between the SDO spacecraft and the for over 40 minutes.

More information: Sources: , , .

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Citation: Did a comet hit cause an explosion on the sun? (2011, October 5) retrieved 19 June 2025 from /news/2011-10-comet-explosion-sun.html
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