The US Space Agency (NASA) on February 3 announced a video simulating magnetic fields around the Sun.
Super solar storms in 2012, if heading toward the globe, could knock down the electric networks on Earth and destroy the satellites on its way.
Every 11 years, this event is repeated once: the Sun's magnetic field will change dramatically for each other.
The solar field will reverse in the next few months, but this change does not increase extreme solar storms, or other events that cause great harm to the earth and its residents.
International aviation agencies are planning to study solar magnetic fields in an area that is extremely difficult to observe called chromosomes. According to a statement from
The Yomiuri daily issued on April 21 led the source of Japan's National Astronomical Observatory (NAOJ), saying that the electrodes on the two halves of the Sun's hemisphere will
Photographs of the sun on March 12 with a telescope show a faint object roughly the size of a planet connected to the sun by a dark colored wire.