no but they have taken pictures
solar flares can wipe out global communication. they can temporarily disable satellites and that can wipeout telephones, internet, and x-box live. the charged particles coming off the sun and going with the solar winds can come into the earth's atmosphere. that can cause Auroras. charged particles coming in and mixing with high-altitude air molecules that cause the Auroras.
Not if you are on the Earth, underneath our protective layer of atmosphere. For astronauts in space, it isn't THAT much of a problem, but the possibility of a massive solar flare that might give the astronauts radiation poisoning can't be eliminated.
No. Solar flares are a characteristic of the Sun and other stars, not of planets.No. Solar flares are a characteristic of the Sun and other stars, not of planets.No. Solar flares are a characteristic of the Sun and other stars, not of planets.No. Solar flares are a characteristic of the Sun and other stars, not of planets.
You can see Solar Flares in the Suns' Corona. corona (apex)
Solar flares, which are sudden and intense bursts of energy from the Sun's surface, release large amounts of magnetic activity. These magnetic storms can disrupt communication systems on Earth by affecting satellites, power grids, and radio signals.
Solar flares are sudden bursts of energy on the sun's surface that release intense radiation across the electromagnetic spectrum. They can cause disruptions to communication systems on Earth and pose a risk to satellites and astronauts in space.
Solar flares: intense bursts of radiation emitted from the sun's surface. Coronal mass ejections (CMEs): massive expulsions of plasma and magnetic field from the sun's corona. Solar particle events: high-energy particles released from the sun that can impact satellites and astronauts in space.
Sun, Stars, Sagitarius, Space dust, Satellites, Solar flares, Saturn
the cause sun spots create prominences the solar flares that interferes with earth's satellites
solar flares can wipe out global communication. they can temporarily disable satellites and that can wipeout telephones, internet, and x-box live. the charged particles coming off the sun and going with the solar winds can come into the earth's atmosphere. that can cause Auroras. charged particles coming in and mixing with high-altitude air molecules that cause the Auroras.
Sudden increases in brightness of the chromosphere of the sun are known as solar flares. These are intense bursts of energy and are associated with sunspots. Solar flares can affect radio communications, satellites, and power grids on Earth.
Solar flares happen on the Sun
Flares of electrically charged particles, also known as solar flares, are intense bursts of energy released by the Sun's magnetic fields. They can occur near sunspots, which are dark regions on the Sun's surface with strong magnetic activity. Solar flares can emit electromagnetic radiation across the spectrum and impact space weather, potentially affecting satellites, power grids, and communication systems on Earth.
No, but it does have solar flares. Solar flares are small explosions that happen on the sun everyday.
No. There will be solar flares in 2012 - there are flares every year, even the last couple of years during the depth of the deepest solar minimum in the last century - but solar flares do not "attack the Earth". It is possible that a massive solar flare could cause communications outages, or damage satellites, or cause spectacular auroras - but that could happen ANY time. There were a few satellites damaged by solar flares during the last solar max, in 2002, but the doom-sayers were wrong about that one, too.
Yes, solar flares occur periodically on the Sun. They are sudden, intense releases of energy that can cause disruptions to satellites, radio communications, and electrical grids on Earth. Scientists monitor these events to better understand and predict their impact.
No, but it has Sun Flares