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            "release_date": "2024-10-15T15:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "What is Solar Maximum?",
            "description": "The Sun is stirring from its latest slumber. As sunspots and flares bubble from the Sun’s surface, representatives from NASA, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Agency (NOAA), and the Solar Cycle Prediction Panel announced on Tuesday, September 24, 2024, the Sun has reached its solar maximum period.The solar cycle is the natural cycle of the Sun as it transitions between low and high activity. During the most active part of the cycle, known as solar maximum, the Sun can unleash immense explosions of light, energy, and solar radiation — all of which create conditions known as space weather. Space weather can affect satellites and astronauts in space, as well as communications systems — such as radio and GPS — and power grids on Earth. || ",
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            "release_date": "2020-09-15T13:00:00-04:00",
            "title": "How To Track The Solar Cycle",
            "description": "A new solar cycle comes roughly every 11 years. Over the course of each cycle, the Sun transitions from relatively calm to active and stormy, and then quiet again; at its peak, the Sun’s magnetic poles flip. Now that the star has passed solar minimum, scientists expect the Sun will grow increasingly active in the months and years to come.Understanding the Sun’s behavior is an important part of life in our solar system. The Sun’s outbursts—including eruptions known as solar flares and coronal mass ejections—can disturb the satellites and communications signals traveling around Earth, or one day, Artemis astronauts exploring distant worlds. Scientists study the solar cycle so we can better predict solar activity. As of 2020, the Sun has begun to shake off the sleep of minimum, which occurred in December 2019, and Solar Cycle 25 is underway. Scientists use several indicators to track solar cycle progress. || ",
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            "id": 13275,
            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/13275/",
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            "title": "How NASA Will Protect Astronauts From Space Radiation",
            "description": "Today, the Apollo-era flares serve as a reminder of the threat of radiation exposure for technology and astronauts in space. Understanding and predicting solar eruptions is crucial for safe space exploration. Almost 50 years since those 1972 storms, the data, technology and resources available to NASA have improved, enabling advancements towards space weather forecasts and astronaut protection — key to NASA’s Artemis program to return astronauts to the Moon.",
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            "title": "Sunspot Live Shots 2014",
            "description": "Canned interviews for Sunspot live shot 11/20/2014 || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_youtube_hq_print.jpg (1024x576) [102.0 KB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_youtube_hq_web.png (320x180) [86.5 KB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_youtube_hq_thm.png (80x40) [6.8 KB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_appletv.m4v (960x540) [86.6 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_appletv.webmhd.webm (960x540) [40.6 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_appletv_subtitles.m4v (960x540) [86.7 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_1280x720.wmv (1280x720) [106.0 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_youtube_hq.mov (1280x720) [289.0 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_ipod_lg.m4v (640x360) [34.0 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_Interview.en_US.srt [4.0 KB] || Alex_Young_Canned_Interview.en_US.vtt [4.0 KB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_nasaportal.mov (640x360) [86.1 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_ipod_sm.mp4 (320x240) [18.0 MB] || Alex_Young_Canned_interview_prores.mov (1280x720) [3.1 GB] || ",
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            "url": "https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/30315/",
            "result_type": "Hyperwall Visual",
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            "title": "World of Change: Solar Activity",
            "description": "The Sun’s activity waxes and wanes as magnetic field lines that are inside the Sun periodically break through to the surface. These breakthroughs produce a pair of sunspots of opposite magnetic polarity that travel together across the face of the Sun. The heightened magnetic activity associated with sunspots can lead to solar flares, coronal mass ejections. This series of images shows ultraviolet light (left) and sunspots (right) each spring from 1999-2010. Sunspots darken the visible surface of the Sun, producing intensely bright areas. The most recent forecast from the Space Weather Prediction Center is that solar cycle 24, which began in 2008, will be of below-average intensity, and will peak in May 2013. The small changes in solar irradiance that occur during the solar cycle exert a small influence on Earth’s climate. Images acquired from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraftReference: NASA’s Earth Observatory || ",
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