It Came from the Sun
			
		
		
		
			What's that 
coming over the edge of the Sun? 
What might appear at first glance to be some sort of 
Sun monster 
is actually a 
solar prominence.  
The above prominence, captured by the Sun-orbiting SOHO satellite 
earlier this year during an early stage of 
its eruption, rapidly became one of the 
largest ever on record.
Even as pictured, the prominence is huge -- the 
Earth would easily fit inside. 
A solar prominence is a thin cloud of solar gas held 
just above the surface by the 
Sun's 
magnetic field. 
A quiescent prominence 
typically lasts about a month, while an 
eruptive prominence like the one developing above may erupt within hours into a 
Coronal Mass Ejection 
(CME), expelling hot gas into the 
Solar System.  
Although very hot, prominences typically 
appear dark when viewed against the 
Sun, 
since they are slightly cooler than the surface.  
As our Sun evolves toward 
Solar maximum 
over the next three years, more 
large eruptive prominences are expected.