Contains:  Solar system body or event
MOUSEOVER - What Do You See? Sunspots AR3668/3664 on May 7, 2024, Hamza Ilyas @Muslimastronomer
MOUSEOVER - What Do You See? Sunspots AR3668/3664 on May 7, 2024, Hamza Ilyas @Muslimastronomer

MOUSEOVER - What Do You See? Sunspots AR3668/3664 on May 7, 2024

MOUSEOVER - What Do You See? Sunspots AR3668/3664 on May 7, 2024, Hamza Ilyas @Muslimastronomer
MOUSEOVER - What Do You See? Sunspots AR3668/3664 on May 7, 2024, Hamza Ilyas @Muslimastronomer

MOUSEOVER - What Do You See? Sunspots AR3668/3664 on May 7, 2024

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Sunspots AR3668 and AR3664 - amazing beautiful magnetically active regions of our nearest star. Often accompanied by proms, solar flares and coronal mass ejections, they are easily identified by their obvious dark appearance on an otherwise bright solar surface. Strangely enough, this pair of sun spots seem to have taken a different appearance: some see a worm, others a baby chick, stretching it's neck to peer above the sea of hydrogen gas. Be sure to mouseover - What do you see?

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