The sun ripped a huge hole

Scientists at the US Aerospace Agency (NASA) on June 5 reported finding a giant flower hole in the Sun when this part of the Sun turned to Earth last week.

Scientists at the US Aerospace Agency (NASA) on June 5 reported finding a giant flower hole in the Sun when this part of the Sun turned to Earth last week.

Picture 1 of The sun ripped a huge hole

Sun flower hole through NASA photos - (Photo: NASA)

Flower holes are areas where the sun is darker, matter concentrates less and is relatively cooler than plasma bodies on the surface of our nearest star. The corona is the source of the solar wind that carries matter particles from the Sun from the Earth's atmosphere, causing aurora (and less spectacular, magnetic storms) on Earth.

When the flower holes are taken through ultraviolet images, they appear as black dots but with the human eye are holes in the plasma.

Last week, from May 28 to May 31, one of the giant flower holes turned to Earth.'That's one of the biggest holes we've seen in a year' - according to NASA.

However, this phenomenon has almost no effect on life on Earth. The solar wind from the Japanese hole usually takes two or three days to reach our planet, so we may have experienced weather changes (if any) caused by this hole.

Update 17 December 2018
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