CNN —When the sun unleashed an extreme solar storm and hit Mars in May, it engulfed the red planet with auroras and an influx of charged particles and radiation, according to NASA.
Solar radiation hits MarsThe most extreme storm occurred on May 20 after an X12 flare released from the sun, according to data collected by the Solar Orbiter spacecraft currently studying the sun.
The Curiosity rover, currently exploring Gale Crater just south of the Martian equator, took black-and-white images using its navigation cameras during the solar storm.
But Mars lost its magnetic field billions of years ago, which means the planet has no shield from incoming energized solar particles.
By tracing the data from multiple Martian missions, scientists were able to watch how the solar storm unfolded.
Persons:
Gale, “, ”, Don Hassler, ” Auroras, Mars, Deborah Padgett, MAVEN, Christina Lee
Organizations:
CNN, NASA, Solar Orbiter, Goddard Space Flight, Mars, Caltech, JPL, Southwest Research, Exploration, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, University of California, Space Sciences Laboratory
Locations:
Northern California, Alabama, Greenbelt , Maryland, Boulder , Colorado, Pasadena , California