ScienceCasts: The Surprising Power of a Solar Storm
Stay up to date with NASA Science: https://science.nasa.gov/?utm_source=... A flurry of solar activity in early March dumped enough heat in Earth's upper atmosphere to power every residence in New York City for two years. The heat has since dissipated, but there's more to come as the solar cycle intensifies.

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Hidden Magnetic Portals Around Earth

▶︎
ScienceCasts: The Sun's Magnetic Field is About to Flip

▶︎
Hunting for Life on Icy Worlds: Iceland’s Extreme Environments Reveal Clues

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Here Comes Solar Maximum

▶︎
What is dark matter and dark energy? Astro-Investigates Ep. 5 (Dark Universe)

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Voyager 1 at the Final Frontier

▶︎
NASA's Our Alien Earth: The Lava Tubes of Mauna Loa, Hawai'i

▶︎
ScienceCasts: What Lies Inside Jupiter

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Voyager

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Why Won't the Supernova Explode?

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Terrifying Auroras

▶︎
Inside Iceland’s "Moon on Earth" | How NASA Preps for the Exploring the Moon

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Andromeda vs. the Milky Way: Astronomers Predict a Titanic Collision

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Mystery of the Lunar Ionosphere

▶︎
ScienceCasts: An Alignment of Planets

▶︎
ScienceCasts: A Star Turns Inside Out

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Mission to Land on a Comet

▶︎
ScienceCasts: Curiosity, The Stunt Double

▶︎
ScienceCasts: The 2012 Transit of Venus

▶︎
