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The craft helped solar boffins to discover that Sol’s north and south magnetic poles are both on the southern side of the star, as seen from Earth. Scientists don’t know why and ESA rates the current ...
We Earthlings see the sun every day of our lives—but gaining a truly new view of our star is a rare and precious thing. So ...
"We didn't know what exactly to expect from these first observations – the sun's poles are literally terra incognita,” Sami ...
The European Space Agency's Solar Orbiter spacecraft returns first-ever data of the Sun collected from a 17-degree tilted ...
For the first time in history, we re seeing the Sun from an angle no one ever has: from above and below its poles. Thanks to ...
Never before seen pictures will help scientists learn how the Sun's activity changes from stormy to quiet periods ...
The European Space Agency's Solar Orbiter, in collaboration with NASA, has captured unprecedented images of the Sun's south ...
The Solar Orbiter spacecraft, a joint mission between the European Space Agency and NASA, is the first to venture into a ...
On June 11, the European Space Agency (ESA) published the first-ever images of the South Pole of the Sun taken by the Solar Orbiter spacecraft.
Solar Orbiter captures first-ever images of the Sun’s poles, offering insights into solar magnetism, atmospheric motion, and the solar wind.