What are coronal mass ejections?

These balls of plasma get launched at high-speed from the sun.

The sun launched this coronal mass ejection at some 900 miles/second (nearly 1,500 km/s) on Aug. 31, 2012. The Earth is not this close to the sun; the image is for scale purposes only.
The sun launched this coronal mass ejection at some 900 miles/second (nearly 1,500 km/s) on Aug. 31, 2012. The Earth is not this close to the sun; the image is for scale purposes only.
(Image credit: NASA)

A coronal mass ejection (CME) is a vast cloud of electrically charged particles from the sun's upper atmosphere or corona that's heated to enormous temperatures and launched with a huge burst of speed by the energy released in a solar flare. These hot blobs of plasma can have spectacular effects on planets that lie in their path, and while CMEs don't present a direct threat to life on Earth, they can potentially damage the technologies on which human society relies.

"CMEs can cause geomagnetic storms upon their arrival in the near-Earth environment," Stephanie Yardley, a space weather expert at University College London, U.K. told Live Science. "These produce ground-induced currents that degrade power grids, and they can also affect the accuracy of GPS and GNSS satellite navigation systems."

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The biggest CMEs of the year (Source: SpaceWeatherLive.com)
CMEDateDuration (Hours)Maximum velocity
20May 31 3 732 miles/sec (1,179 km/s)
19May 30 284 mi/s (136 km/s)
18May 30 2 226 mi/s (365 km/s)
17May 30 2291 mi/s (469 km/s)
16May 30 1462 mi/s (744 km/s)
15May 30 3778 mi/s (1,252 km/s)
14May 29 2380 mi/s (612 km/s)
13May 29 0287 mi/s (462 km/s)
12May 29 2190 mi/s (306 km/s)
11May 29 1282 mi/s (455 km/s)
10May 29 1168 mi/s (271 km/s)
9May 29 1190 mi/s (306 km/s)
8May 28 11,021 mi/s (1,644 km/s)
7May 28 2809 mi/s (1,302 km/s)
6May 28 0340 mi/s (548 km/s)
5May 28 2467 mi/s (753 km/s)
4May 28 4346 mi/s (558 km/s)
3May 28 2289 mi/s (466 km/s)
2May 27 2280 mi/s (452 km/s)
1May 27 1313 mi/s (504 km/s)
Giles Sparrow
Contributor

After studying astronomy at University College London and Science Communication at Imperial College, Giles set out on an Exciting Adventure with Illustrated Publishing. He's since written a string of beautiful and successful books on astronomy, science and other cool subjects, and is also a regular contributor to magazines. When he's not doing the day job, you’ll find him fanboying about Doctor Who or lost in some obscure corner of history…