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The solar flare of Feb. 22, 2024, recorded using the eight different filters of the SUIT instrument on board India's Aditya-L1 spacecraft. (Image credit: ISRO/SUIT/Aditya-L1) ...
Aditya-L1 made the observation on Oct. 29, less than two months after lifting off. India's newly launched Aditya-L1 sun-studying mission has already captured its first glimpse of a solar flare in ...
ISRO’s Aditya-L1 captures X-class solar flare and plasma eruption. Aditya-L1 took a picture of an X-class solar flare—a colossal explosion of energy from the Sun—on December 31, 2023.
The Aditya-L1 mission exemplifies India's increasing expertise in space research. It is the nation's first space-based observatory-class solar mission, with all seven payloads developed domestically.
India’s Aditya-L1 mission has captured a unique solar event. The spacecraft recorded the first-ever image of a solar flare ‘kernel.’ This rare observation was made in the lower solar atmosphere.
Isro said the Aditya-L1 captured its first high-energy X-ray glimpse of solar flares using the HEL1OS instrument, which is on-board the spacecraft ...
Aditya-L1’s instruments capture solar activity, monitor major solar flares On May 17, 2024, SUIT started taking pictures of Sun and provided important data to ISRO and other scientist around the ...
India is launching its first space-based solar observatory mission called Aditya-L1 to study the sun — just days after the successful landing of the India is launching its first space-based ...
From its vantage point about 1 million miles (1.5 million kilometers) from Earth, Aditya-L1 gets an uninterrupted view of our sun, allowing the probe to observe solar flares as they're unleashed ...
Aditya-L1, the first space-based Indian mission to study the sun, was launched on September 2 and is currently on its journey to the destination of sun-earth L1 point (L1).
India's Aditya-L1 spacecraft captured detailed observations of a powerful solar flare last year, helping scientists better understand our star's eruptions.