NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center has released a 1-hour video showing the

Sun's 133 days of life.

ScienceAlert writes about it.

From a series of images created by the cameras of the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) spacecraft, NASA created a stunning video clip.

It lasts only 1 hour, but during this time you can observe what happened to our Sun during 133 days.

In the new video, you can also see that something is constantly happening on the Sun, and the surface of the star is constantly changing.

In particular, one can see huge loops of plasma bending along the lines of force of the star's magnetic field.

Also shown here are solar flares and plasma ejections into space that create dangerous space weather.

The SDO instrument studies the interior of the Sun, its magnetic field, and the hot plasma in the solar corona.

Every day, the spacecraft creates approximately 70,000 images of the star, and the total volume of data reaches 1.5 terabytes.

Earlier, scientists said that a crack was formed in the Earth's magnetic field due to a powerful flow of solar particles that escaped from the 

Sun

 during another solar flare.

This hole in the magnetosphere allowed charged solar particles to penetrate deeper into the planet's atmosphere, resulting in an unusual, very rare pink 

aurora in the sky over Norway.

Read also:

  • The Sun threw out one of the largest streams of plasma with a length of more than 1.5 million km

  • A cloud of solar plasma will cover the Earth: a powerful magnetic storm will last for two days

  • A spiral in the sky over New Zealand scared people: scientists explained what it is

  • Scientists have found out where Saturn has such an inclination and rings