 
          The Sky at Night S62E7 - Death Star
            
              8.3/10 by 13 users
            
            
              One evening in early September 1859, a spectacular blood-red aurora borealis appeared across America. Earlier that same day, in a leafy garden in the UK, a gentleman astronomer had noted a 'white light flare' on the sun's surface. The two events were linked; it's now known that the flare caused the aurora. The flare was a particularly violent eruption from the sun's surface known as a CME, a coronal mass ejection. Back then, it was considered an astronomical curiosity. But when it happens again, it will be a different story. For the modern, technological world such a violent solar phenomenon could be devastating. This episode examines just how damaging a CME could be and how astronomers, using two new satellites that will travel closer to the sun than ever before, can better prepare us for its impact. 
            
          | Released | Apr 24, 1957 | 
|---|---|
| Runtime | 30min | 
| Genre | Documentary, News | 
| Actor | N/A | 
| Director | N/A | 
| Production | N/A | 
 
           
           
           
           
           
           
           
           
           
          