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Originally posted by xxshadowfaxx
If the sun was destroyed right now, every living thing on earth would have approximately 8 minutes to live. Then we would all be frozen solid, instantly. It takes 8 minutes for the sun's light to reach us.
Originally posted by Phage
Dutchinse should go away.
The "feed" was not cut.
Originally posted by xxshadowfaxx
If the sun was destroyed right now, every living thing on earth would have approximately 8 minutes to live. Then we would all be frozen solid, instantly. It takes 8 minutes for the sun's light to reach us.
Originally posted by MentalPriapism
What if our sun was suddenly destroyed? I may want to live underground then, too! I realize it is implausible but at this point in history who the hell knows what's going to happen? Sorry I realize this is a somewhat pointless addition but I gotta get my post count up there so I can make threads!
SOHO is not in contact with the earth 24 hours a day. The Deep Space Network is a world wide network of antennas used to communicate with all deep space probes including SOHO, the Mars Rover, Voyager and Cassini. It is very busy supporting all of these missions. The Deep Space Network schedule varies from day to day and a spacecraft emergency for another spacecraft can affect the schedule. We are lucky to get a few hours a day of contact time. During the time when SOHO is out of contact the data are stored on a tape recorder (actually a solid state or RAM recorder). When the ground station establishes contact with SOHO, the solid state recorder containing the stored data is dumped and real time data starts. The hours of recorded data takes time to process so the 16 hour gap gets filled in over a few hours after contact and the tape recorder is dumped.
Originally posted by OMsk3ptic
Just reading around, if the sun just "went out", it would take a couple weeks for the Earth's surface temperature to reach 0, and after a year it would be around -100. But if we could harness volcanic heat, we could still survive for a while without the sun. Of course that doesn't take into account the gravitational effects, Im not sure what would happen if the Earth just went hurtling through space without the gravity of the sun.
I am not saying that the feed was cut. I don't really know what you're talking about. What I observed was a jump in the time stamp from around 18:24 to 00:23. Those missing images were later filled in. And this happened on both C2 and C3 for the same period of time, 6 hours.
The data stream from SOHO is not continuous. The insinuation that the "feed" was intentionally "cut" is typical Dutchinse nonsense. It happens frequently.
The comet was probably a member of the Kreutz sungrazer family. Named after a 19th century German astronomer who studied them in detail, Kreutz sungrazers are fragments from the breakup of a single giant comet around a thousand years ago, probably the Great Comet of 1106. Several of these fragments pass by the sun and disintegrate every day. Most are too small to see but occasionally a big fragment like this one attracts attention.
Although the comet has disintegrated, we may be seeing more of it in the days ahead as additional movies from other solar observatories come to light. Stay tuned
That sounds reasonable. Data was not sent so both camera images were missing for the same time period. It also makes sense that I wouldn't notice until a spectacular event such as a comet hitting the Sun. After all I don't spend much time on SOHO.
...and, Devino: that would have happened (both the loss of contact and the subsequent infill of data at a later time) whether it was brought up on ATS or not. It had happened many times before when people on ATS didn't notice or didn't bother to comment.