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"It is hard to easily judge the size of this 3D event with a 2D image at this angle, but this filament is probably on the order of 30 Earths across, 300,000 kilometers or 186,000 miles," explained C. Alex Young, a solar physicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. "When the filament expanded into space it quickly became more extended leaving the sun as a CME many solar diameters across, many millions of kilometers or miles."
"This "long filament of solar material," as NASA calls it, was spotted tearing away from the Sun at upwards of 900 miles per second. Yes, per second; this CME, as is typical of super-hot plasma filaments that are flung from the sun, was hauling serious ass. It was also freaking enormous — plenty big enough to wrap itself around the Earth a few times — not to mention a few other planets — and still have some plasma left over:"
From: This solar eruption video will straight up melt your face it's so awesome
Sept. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Matt Damon, co-founder of Water.org, and Gary White, co-founder and chief executive officer, talk about their nonprofit organization's efforts to provide access to "clean water and sanitation for everyone on Earth in our lifetime." They spoke with Bloomberg News reporter Amanda Gordon in New York on Sept. 20. (Source: Bloomberg)
One of the coolest stories from last week (September 18, 2012) introduced the world to what many are now calling an underwater crop circle. Of course, these sea floor circles have nothing to do with crops, but they are intricate circles,
reminiscent of the elaborate crop circles that sometimes turn up in farmers’ fields. Japanese photographer Yoji Ookata captured the photos below while on a dive near Amami Oshima at the southern tip of Japan . He said the rippling geometric sand patterns are nearly six feet in diameter and almost 80 feet below sea level.