After five years of surprising quiet, the sun roared to life in 2011. Our star erupted with numerous strong flares and waves of charged
particles. Many researchers predict the surge will culminate in a peak
in the sun's 11-year activity cycle in 2013.
Eruptive prominence blasting away from sun |
This year also marked several key advances in scientists' understanding of the dynamics driving our favorite star. Having been relatively quiet since 2005, the sun spouted off a number
of powerful flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) this year. CMEs are made up of massive clouds of plasma that are sent streaking
through space in any direction at several million mph. When these clouds
are aimed at Earth, they can spawn geomagnetic storms that wreak havoc with GPS signals, radio communications and power grids.
"We are getting more CMEs and starting to get some more-energetic CME/flare combinations," Terry Kucera, deputy project scientist with NASA's Solar and Heliospheric Observatory spacecraft, told SPACE.com via email.