NASA: 75,000-Mile-Wide Hole In Sun Will Cause ‘Chaos’ On Earth

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Giant hole in sun could pose significant risk to Earth according to NASA scientists

NASA scientists have warned that a giant hole in the Sun could cause blackouts and interrupt radio, television and internet services on Earth in the coming weeks.

The 75,000-mile-wide sunspot, called AR2665, is so enormous is can even be seen from our planet.

Unilad.co.uk reports: NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory first detected the huge spot last week and experts believe it could send ‘M-class’ solar flares down to us on Earth.

You can watch the incredible footage of the hole supplied by NASA in the clip below:




In a statement, NASA said:

A new sunspot group has rotated into view and seems to be growing rather quickly. It is the first sunspot to appear after the sun was spotless for two days, and it is the only sunspot group on the sun at this moment.

It could be the source for some solar flares, but it is too early to predict just what it will do.

While the spot seems to be lingering, it has become a source of concern. Sunspots are darker, cooler areas on the surface of the sun, caused by the sun’s magnetic field.

They usually crop up in areas of intense magnetic activity, and when that energy is released, solar flares and huge radiation storms erupt from sunspots.

Yesterday, forecasters from NOAA predicted a 25 per cent chance of seeing M-class flares today, because the sunspot was directly facing our planet.

However, unless I’m missing something, their tentative prediction didn’t come true so we’re probably all going to be fine. So sit back, relax, and marvel at this unbelievably cool quirk of the solar system.

2 Comments

  1. Beware of earthquakes. Who cares about internet and TV? Solar flares cause some of our largest deadliest earthquakes.

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