Spacecraft Calibrations Provide Unique Solar “Artwork”

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If you check out the Solar Dynamics Observatory website today to get an update of what the Sun is doing, (which you should -everyday!) you may have noticed a few of the daily images appeared to be “sliding” across the screen. That’s because yesterday the team from the AIA instrument (Atmospheric Imaging Assembly) performed several instrument calibration maneuvers, in which the AIA boresight was moved away from the center of the Sun. When the images are re-centered some of them have lines to the edges of the picture, creating some very nifty solar artwork. Enjoy them now, as this effect will only show up in the “rapid” images shown on their website, and later, they’ll be corrected in the science database. See more below.

More SDO artwork.

SDO takes images of the Sun in several different wavelengths, which highlights different features. On SDO’s Facebook page, the team wrote, “It appears that the re-centering of the images is copying the value at the edge of the field of view rather than zero while the image is being shifted to the center of the picture.”

And even though the images will be fixed, they won’t be able to fix them completely. The information that is missing from images can’t be recovered because the instrument wasn’t pointed at the Sun at the time the image was taken.

More SDO artwork.

4 Replies to “Spacecraft Calibrations Provide Unique Solar “Artwork””

  1. Remember the conspiracy theorists who thought cosmic rays on previous images were shiny planet-sized metal spheres hovering near the sun? What are they going to make of this? OMG teh sun its fiaring LAZOR’S!!!1!

  2. Upside of science fiction: It helps prepare both developing minds and mature ones to develop new and interesting theories and explanations of the Universe and how it works.

    Downside? It gives conspiracy folks with too much time on their hands plenty of fodder to distract everyone else from the important things that need to be discovered and understood properly.

    I suppose, however, you just have to take the good with the bad. :^P

    (full disclosure: I am a huge sci-fi buff)

  3. “Remember the conspiracy theorists who thought cosmic rays on previous images were shiny planet-sized metal spheres hovering near the sun? What are they going to make of this?”

    Proof of Birkeland currents! 🙂

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