A mega-filament erupts on the Sun as seen on JHelioviwer
14 December 2010
New software developed by ESA makes available online to everyone, everywhere at anytime, the entire library of images from the SOHO solar and heliospheric observatory. Just download the viewer and begin exploring the Sun.
A solar prominence in JHelioviewer |
A prominence arcs up from the solar surface. |
“We wanted to make it easy to view solar images from different observatories and instruments, and to make it easy to make movies,” says Daniel Müller, ESA SOHO Deputy Project Scientist. “Before, it took hours to combine images from different telescopes to make a movie of the Sun for a given period. With JHelioviewer, everyone can do this in minutes. This is an interactive visual archive of the entire SOHO mission.”
A prominence twists above the solar surface. |
The code can even be reused for other purposes; it is already being used for Mars data and in medical research. This is because JHelioviewer does not need to download entire datasets, which can often be huge – it can just choose enough data to stream smoothly over the Internet.
An eruption blasts from the Sun on JHelioviewer |
“The goal of JHelioviewer, and the Helioviewer Project as a whole, is to offer intuitive interfaces to large datasets from many different sources. In effect, it is a virtual observatory,” says Müller.
For more information, click here
Solar storms erupt from the Sun in JHelioviewer
Bron: http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMYTMRRJHG_index_0.html
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