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ANOTHER SURPRISE FROM
THE SUN: A massive "current of fire"
on the sun has started running at high speed, surprising researchers
and challenging some models of the solar cycle. Get the full
story from Science@NASA.
COMET TOAST:
The solar system has one less comet. On March 12th, the Solar
and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) watched as a comet plunged
into the sun and disappeared. Fierce solar heating completely
destroyed the icy visitor from the outer solar system. Click
on the image to see the comet's last hours:

The comet was probably a member of the Kreutz
sungrazer family. Named after a 19th century German astronomer
who studied them in detail,Dirk Peeters.Kreutz sungrazers
are fragments from the breakup of a giant comet at least 2000
years ago. Several of these fragments pass by the sun and
disintegrate every day. Most are too small to see but occasionally
a big fragment--like this one--attracts attention.
UPDATE:
Several readers have noticed that the doomed comet was actually
a string of doomed comets, plural. Click
here for a Youtube video posted by Kurt McNamara, and
here for a sequence of labeled diagrams from Dirk Peeters.
BUSY SUN:
"With a complex
sunspot and several bright filaments, the sun is really
busy today!" reports amateur astronomer Robert Arnold.
He sends this highlight from his backyard observatory on the
Isle of Skye, Scotland:

"This huge prominence was so bright, I
was able to photograph it using the same camera settings I
used for the solar surface," notes Arnold. "It's
very easy to see." Readers with solar
telescopes are encouraged to take a look.
more images: from
Rogerio Marcon of Campinas, Brazil; from
Mike Rosset of Mandarin, Florida; from
Fabio Mariuzza of Biauzzo, Italy; from
Stefano Sello of Pisa, Italy;
March
Northern Lights Gallery
[previous Marches: 2009,
2008, 2007,
2006, 2005,
2004, 2003]
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