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  • [♪ INTRO]

  • Between the most experienced astronaut coming home and the strongest solar flare in 11 years,

  • the past couple of weeks have been full of record-smashing

  • in the world of astronomy and space travel.

  • First, on September 2, NASA astronaut Peggy Whitson returned from

  • the International Space Station with a bunch of new records under her belt.

  • Whitson had been to the ISS before, and this time,

  • she was up there for 288 days; more than nine months!

  • It was such a long trip that she's now spent more uninterrupted time in space

  • than any other woman in the world.

  • And in total, she's also spent more time in space than any other American, period:

  • a total of 665 days!

  • She was originally supposed to come home in June, but she had the opportunity to stay

  • for an extra few months and jumped on it.

  • On this trip, Whitson also became the oldest woman to go to space.

  • She was 56 years old when she left Earth, and she celebrated her 57th birthday on the

  • Space Station, which sounds like a pretty awesome birthday party.

  • Whitson has also done ten spacewalks, the most of any woman, was the first female commander

  • of the ISS, and is also the only woman to have taken command of the Space Station twice!

  • Besides being a record-shattering machine, Whitson is an accomplished biochemist,

  • and did a lot of work while in orbit.

  • A big advantage of doing science aboard the Space Station is the microgravity, or weightlessness.

  • Scientists can look at systems that we understand well on Earth, and learn what they'll do

  • when they're not feeling gravity pulling them to the ground.

  • Along with another astronaut, Colonel Jack Fischer, Whitson conducted experiments to

  • learn more about what causes the vision problems many astronauts experience in microgravity.

  • She also worked on projects designed to see what microgravity does to stem cells, and

  • to antibodies that could be effective in cancer treatments.

  • And just by being there, she and all the astronauts on the ISS helped NASA's ongoing effort

  • to figure out what happens to our bodies when we spend a long time in space, which will

  • be especially important once we start going on longer missions, like to Mars.

  • Not many astronauts stay on the ISS for more than six months at a time, so Whitson is giving

  • researchers an unusual amount of data.

  • And now that she's back, she'll continue to be a scientific rockstar here on Earth,

  • at least, once she gets used to gravity again.

  • Meanwhile, just after she made it home, a major solar storm kicked off!

  • It began as a mid-sized event on September 4th,

  • but quickly became an intense storm that lasted into this week.

  • Solar storms happen when the Sun releases a bunch of built-up magnetic energy, which

  • causes explosions called solar flares and coronal mass ejections

  • that can interact with the Earth's atmosphere.

  • Solar flares are given a letter and number to describe how intense they are.

  • The weakest ones are class A, followed by classes B, C, M, and X.

  • Class X solar flares are the strongest.

  • They're at least ten thousand times stronger than class A.

  • There were a few different flares, but the largest one in this storm occurred on September

  • 6th with a magnitude of X9.3, the strongest we've seen since 2006.

  • Solar storms can't harm humans on the ground because Earth's atmosphere protects us,

  • but storms of this magnitude can mess with satellites and power grids.

  • Thankfully, it doesn't seem like there were any major failures this time,

  • but we were still able to see the storm's effects!

  • After larger flares, there were short, high-frequency radio blackouts,

  • and the Northern Lights were observed as far south as North Carolina!

  • What's unusual about this storm isn't just its intensity.

  • It also showed up as we're moving toward a period of minimal solar activity.

  • The Sun's activity level, which includes events like solar flares, is on an 11-year

  • cycle, where activity gets really high, then low, then high again.

  • Right now, it's on its way to the lowest part of that cycle,

  • but we still got a random, huge solar storm in the middle of that.

  • The X9.3 solar flare was actually the largest one recorded during this entire solar cycle!

  • It might sound weird, but a burst like this

  • during the less active part of the cycle isn't unheard of.

  • In the long run, the Sun's activity is still going down,

  • but sometimes there happens to be a random strong event along the way.

  • So it's not totally strange, just kind of surprising and special.

  • And there was no major damage.

  • But since we know a strong enough explosion from the Sun could knock out our power grids

  • and communications systems, we're still trying to get better at predicting them.

  • And one way we're hoping to learn more is through the Parker Solar Probe,

  • which we talked about back when the mission was first getting started.

  • It'll launch in 2018 and investigate all sorts of mysteries about the Sun.

  • Until then, we'll keep monitoring this storm as it calms down,

  • and keep an eye out for others.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space News!

  • If you'd like to stay up to date with the latest happenings in the universe,

  • you can head over to youtube.com/scishowspace and subscribe.

  • [♪ OUTRO]

[♪ INTRO]

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