14. Two more coronal mass ejections
Two more coronal mass ejections observed with the coronagraph on
board the Solar Maximum Mission satellite.
Coronal mass ejections occur at all latitudes, suggesting that they are
not directly
related to intense localized heating events such as flares,
as the latter are restricted to low latitude
active regions. In fact few coronal mass ejections are observed
to be preceded by large flares or intense activity. Observations also
show that the expanding coronal material can be still accelerating
a few solar radii away from the Sun, and often moving at velocities
in excess of the gravitational escape speed, suggesting that the
acceleration process is primarily magnetic in origin. The triggering of
a coronal mass ejections is currently believed to be caused by
a loss of large-scale magnetostatic equilibrium.
The 24 October 1989 coronal mass ejection shown on the lower
sequence of images
is one of the most powerful recorded by the Solar Maximum Mission
Coronagraph; approximately kg
of material were ejected with peak velocities
of nearly 2000 km s
, blowing a
hole nearly
100 degrees wide through the solar corona.