Bad Astronomy

Sunsquatch

I love the images of the Sun taken by astrophotographer Alan Friedman. I love pareidolia. And I love cryptozoology.

So of course I love love love this:

[Click to sasquatchenate.]

Pareidolia is the trait of seeing recognizable objects in random patterns (usually, but not always, faces). Cryptozoology is the study of fabled creatures like Nessie, or the chupracabra, or… I don’t know, for a totally random example, let’s say Bigfoot.

Still not sure what I mean? Maybe this’ll help:

Ha!

OK, I’ll be a pedantic dork for just a sec, and say that this is actually just a prominence, an eruption of ionized gas off the surface of the Sun, guided by the twisting and churning solar magnetic field. Prominences can take all sorts of shapes – even angels and dragons – as they launch upward and fall back down to the Sun’s surface.

Alan Apeman – urp, sorry, I mean Friedman – takes simply amazing pictures of the Sun which I feature here all the time; see the Related posts section below for many more. And you should keep an eye on his pictures. Who knows what you’ll find in them? Image credit: Alan Friedman

Related posts:

- Seriously jaw-dropping picture of the Sun
- The boiling, erupting Sun
- The delicate tendrils of a solar dragon
- For your viewing pleasure: Active Region 1302