solar active region tagged posts

Rare high-resolution observations of a flare-prolific solar active region

Mosaics of GREGOR observations in different wavelength bands showing the active region NOAA 14274 at around 08:33 UT on 10 November 2025, about 30 minutes before an X1.2 flare began.
Credit: AIP / C. Denker

Scientists have captured an exceptionally rare, high-resolution view of an active region that produced two powerful X-class solar flares—an achievement rarely possible from Earth. Using the GREGOR solar telescope in Tenerife, researchers recorded the explosive activity of the sun’s most energetic sunspot group of 2025, revealing twisted magnetic structures and the early stages of flare ignition with unprecedented detail. The flares triggered fast coronal mass ejections that lit up Earth’s skies with vivid auroras in the nights that followed.

Challenges of observing solar flares
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