Colour print showing solar prominences Colour print showing solar prominences

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Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Science Museum Group
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

One of three colour engravings with window mounts of colour sketches showing two enlarged viws of solar prominences (Pl 9.), observed and drawn by Etienne Leopold Trouvelot in 1872 at the Harvard College Observatory.

Lithographic colour print issued by Harvard College Observatory in 1876, showing two sketches of solar prominences. Drawn in 1872 by Etienne Leopold Trouvelot (1827-1895), a French artist, these red protuberances on the Sun are normally only visible at totality during a solar eclipse. They can be seen at other times using a spectroscope that is aimed at a tangent to the Sun with its split-jaws partly open. Prominences are massive eruptions of hydrogen gas, often larger than the Earth, which arch away from the surface of the Sun. Associated with its magnetic field, some violent flares called Coronal Mass Ejection can disrupt the Earth's radio communications and produce spectacular aurora displays.

Details

Category:
Astronomy
Object Number:
1887-24/2
Materials:
paper
Measurements:
overall (mount): 460 x 355 x 1.5 mm
type:
prints, lithographs, sun, solar prominences and solar chromosphere
credit:
Normal School of Science (Astronomical Laboratory)