• Home
  • All StoriesNationalMadridCataluñaValencia
    de la Luzdel Solde CálidaBlancaTropical
    AndalucíaGranadaMálagaSevilla(Gibraltar)
    BalearesIbizaMallorcaCanariesTenerife
    BusinessSportNorth SpainBasque CountryGalicia
  • Sightseeing
    BarcelonaBilbaoGranadaMadridMálaga
    MéridaMurciaSantanderSevillaValencia
  • SpainAlicanteBarcelonaBenidorm
    CádizCórdobaGranadaLas PalmasIbiza
    MadridMálagaSevillaTenerifeU.K.
  • New ArrivalsVocabularyRecipesFiesta!Sightseeing
    CultureFeaturesFilmsHistoryProfiles
    Audio
    AirportsRate Card 2017
Culture, Newsletter

A solar flare captured in Spain since 1886


The third known solar flare seen in history



Sep 18, 2017 - 12:52 PM
During this month, the satellites have detected potent solar flares, but this natural phenomenon has been captured more than a century ago.

solarflare.jpg
The 1886 drawing


On 10 September 1886, a young fan of astrology aged just 17, observed from Madrid with his modest telescope one of these flares leaving the stain on the sun. He wrote down what he saw, and published a drawing showing the data in a French scientific magazine, according to current scientists at the Canaries Astrophysics Institute and the Extremadura University.

‘In the eastern region of the solar southern hemisphere yesterday and today appeared an enormous and beautiful stain and above it an extraordinary phenomenon in the shadow, to the west of the nucleus, discovered a brightly shining almost circular white spot, which was emitted a large solar flare’

With these words described Juan Valderrama y Aguilar, a 17-year-old fan of astronomy, living in Madrid with his small telescope of only 6.6cms of aperture and equipped with a neutral filter to darken the light.

‘The case of Valderrama is singular, being at the time the only person in the world to observe more than a century ago this relatively rare phenomenon, a white solar flare, which nobody else had noticed’ explained José Manuel Vaquero, professor at Extremadura University and co-author of an article on that happening which is published now in Solar Physics.

The solar flare is a rapid increase in light in the region of the Sun’s atmosphere. At the extremes (chromosphere and corona) when the magnetic field changes and releases energy, which can be detected in diverse bands of the electromagnetic spectrum, such as visible or ultraviolet light, but most commonly in X rays.

This month they have observed several of these large solar flares, some showing an exit of corona mass, which in turn produce geomagnetic storms which have on occasions affected the communication systems established by man, radio and GPS mostly.

‘These ‘white-light flares’ correspond to the most extreme cases of the natural phenomenon, where the energy is so high it prolongs into the photosphere, heats up and produces a massive amount of energy as bright white light, hence the name’ explained the other co-author Jorge Sánchez Almedia from the Canaries Astrophysics Institute.

The two previous sightings of these solar flares was registered by a British astronomer, Richard C. Carrington on 1 September 1859 and then the Italian Pietro Angelo Secchi on 13 November 1872, and then debate ensued over whether these solar flares have any effect on earth.


Save on your hotel - www.hotelscombined.com




Comment Form is loading comments...


advanced search


TweetFollow @typspan



- About Us - Contact - Disclaimer - Privacy - Privacidad - Cookies - Rss - rate card
© 1999 - 2021 Howard John Brereton - No part of this site may be reproduced without written permission. -