An Extremely Long Filament on the Sun
			
		
		
			Image Credit & Copyright:  
Oliver Hardy
		
		
			Yesterday, the Sun exhibited one of the longest filaments ever recorded. 
It may still be there today.
Visible as the dark streak just below the center in the featured image, 
the enormous filament extended across the face of the Sun a distance 
even longer than the Sun's radius -- over 700,000 kilometers.
A filament is actually 
hot gas held aloft 
by the Sun's magnetic field, so that viewed from the side it would appear as a 
raised prominence.  
The featured image shows the filament in 
light emitted by hydrogen and therefore highlights the 
Sun's chromosphere. 
Sun-following telescopes including NASA's 
Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) are tracking 
this unusual feature, with SDO yesterday recording a 
spiraling magnetic field engulfing it. 
Since 
filaments 
typically last only from hours to days, parts of this one may 
collapse or 
erupt at any time, either returning hot plasma back to the Sun or 
expelling it into the Solar System. 
Is the filament still there? 
You can check by clicking on 
SDO's current solar image.