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American Focus > Blog > Tech and Science > Jaw-Dropping Explosions on The Sun Captured in First NASA PUNCH Images : ScienceAlert
Tech and Science

Jaw-Dropping Explosions on The Sun Captured in First NASA PUNCH Images : ScienceAlert

Last updated: June 21, 2025 2:00 am
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Jaw-Dropping Explosions on The Sun Captured in First NASA PUNCH Images : ScienceAlert
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NASA’s PUNCH Mission Captures Stunning Images of Solar Wind Activity

The latest NASA mission, known as the Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH), has unveiled its first images of massive coronal mass ejections (CMEs) emanating from the Sun. These images were showcased at the 246th meeting of the American Astronomical Society, revealing these colossal events on an unprecedented scale.

Heliophysicist and PUNCH principal investigator Craig DeForest from the Southwest Research Institute expressed his excitement during the presentation, highlighting the unique nature of these images. CMEs are massive discharges of solar plasma and magnetic fields that are ejected from the Sun, resulting from the tangling, snapping, and reconnecting of the Sun’s magnetic field lines. These events, which sometimes coincide with solar flares, release an immense amount of energy and solar particles into space.

A particular type of CME, known as a halo CME, occurs when the ejection is directed towards Earth. From our perspective, the expanding ejecta appears to encircle the Sun like a halo before traveling through the Solar System at high speeds. The PUNCH mission was able to track a CME hurtling through space at 4 million miles per hour until just two hours before it reached Earth’s magnetic field. These events often lead to the spectacular auroras that illuminate Earth’s polar regions but can also disrupt communications and harm satellites.

The primary goal of the PUNCH mission is to record solar events in 3D over a two-year period, aiming to enhance our understanding of space weather. While the four probes are still being positioned, the team is conducting instrument tests and collecting observations to improve space weather tracking and prediction tools.

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DeForest emphasized that the current data are preliminary but show promise, with calibration expected to enhance the quality of the images later this summer. As the mission progresses, more incredible images and insights are anticipated, marking the beginning of an exciting journey into the realm of solar observations.

Stay tuned for more updates on the PUNCH mission and its groundbreaking discoveries as it continues to unravel the mysteries of the Sun’s activity.

TAGGED:CapturedExplosionsImagesjawdroppingNasapunchScienceAlertSun
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