A mushroom of cooled plasma popped like a pimple and rained onto the surface of the sun yesterday—shooting perhaps the largest amount of solar material into space ever seen, scientists say.
The   solar flare—an unusually bright spot on the sun—wasn't surprising as a   "moderate" event. Space observatories in the past year recorded about  70  such solar flares, each roughly ten times weaker than "extreme"  flares,  of which only two have occurred since 2007.
Instead,   what shocked scientists was the unusual amount of material that lofted   up, expanded, and fell back down over roughly half the surface area of   the sun. The event's simultaneous launch of particles into space is  called a coronal mass ejection (CME).
"This  totally caught us by  surprise. There wasn't much going on with this  spot, but as it came  from behind the sun, all of the sudden there was a  flare and huge  ejection of particles," said astrophysicist Phillip  Chamberlin of NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), one of several  spacecraft that recorded the event.
"We've never seen a CME this enormous."
 
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