Scientists use helioseismology, the study of sound waves traveling through the Sun, to detect subtle oscillations that reveal hidden solar activity on the Sun's far side, allowing them to predict massive solar flares before they appear on the visible surface.
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Deep Dive
Discover how scientists use solar helioseismology to predict massive solar flaresHinzugefügt:
The sun is shivering.
1995 NASA's SOHO satellite captures a rhythmic tremor deep within the solar core.
Scientists realize the entire star is oscillating like a ringing bell, but one frequency is off.
This subtle wobble is actually a warning of a coming magnetic explosion.
By tracking these sound waves, researchers can now see through the sun to its hidden far side.
They spot a monster sunspot growing on the back, invisible to every other telescope on Earth.
Standard physics says we should not know it is there until the sun rotates, but the wobble knows what is coming for us.
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