A huge eruption of material from regions of the solar corona in which the
magnetic field is closed, but which suffer an extremely energetic
disruption. Over the course of several hours up to 10,000 billion kg
of this material is ejected into
→ interplanetary space with a a speed of as high as 3000 km/s.
CMEs are most spectacularly observed by a white light coronagraph located outside
Earth’s atmosphere. Such observations from Skylab in the early
1970’s were the first to reveal this phenomenon.
CME’s disrupt the flow of the → solar wind
and can produce intense
electromagnetic disturbances that can severely damage satellites and
disrupt power grids on Earth. When these ejections reach the Earth, they give rise to
→ geomagnetic storms.
The frequency varies with the → solar cycle;
during solar minimum they come at a rate of about one per week,
and during maximum there is an average of about two or three per day. See also
→ interplanetary coronal mass ejections (ICME).
See also: → coronal; → mass;
→ ejection.