
Overview
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.
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2018 - 1The Invisible Universe January 14, 2018
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2018 - 2The Mystery of 'Oumuamua February 11, 2018
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2018 - 3Mars: Red and Dead? April 08, 2018
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2018 - 4Gaia: A Galactic Revolution May 13, 2018
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2018 - 5Jupiter: Up Close and Personal June 10, 2018
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2018 - 6Outback Astronomy July 08, 2018
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2018 - 7Death Star August 12, 2018
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2018 - 8Expedition Asteroid September 09, 2018
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2018 - 9Space Britannia October 14, 2018
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2018 - 10First Rock from the Sun November 18, 2018
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2018 - 11The Flying Telescope December 09, 2018