The Smallest Window on the Sun

The Sun unleashes a mid-level flare on 24 August 2014, captured by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory, the gold standard against which the new metasurface results were tested (Credit: NASA/SDO)

Every so often, the Sun hurls billions of tonnes of charged particles toward Earth in what are called coronal mass ejections and if a big one hits at the wrong moment, the consequences for satellites, power grids, and communications systems could be catastrophic. Our best defence is to predict them before they happen, and that means watching the Sun’s magnetic fields constantly and precisely. Now, a component smaller than a shirt button could transform how we do exactly that.

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