"Debunking the Myth: What You Really Saw During the Total Eclipse"

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Source: Livescience.com
"Debunking the Myth: What You Really Saw During the Total Eclipse"
Photo: Livescience.com
TL;DR Summary

During the recent total solar eclipse, observers saw large plasma plumes around the sun, which were initially mistaken for explosive solar flares. However, experts clarified that these were actually prominences, long-lived plasma structures, and not solar flares. Solar activity data confirmed that there was only one minor solar flare that did not produce a coronal mass ejection during the eclipse. The sun's unexpected inactivity with almost no sunspots reduced the chances of solar flares occurring during the eclipse, despite the sun being near the peak of its solar cycle.

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