Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. News

See an incredible view of the sun’s corona captured by the Solar Orbiter spacecraft

Add as a preferred source on Google
Five years into its mission, Solar Orbiter stuns again with this detailed view of the Sun. What you see is the Sun’s million-degree hot atmosphere, called the corona, as it looks in ultraviolet light.
Five years into its mission, Solar Orbiter stuns again with this detailed view of the Sun. What you see is the Sun’s million-degree hot atmosphere, called the corona, as it looks in ultraviolet light. ESA & NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI Team, E. Kraaikamp (ROB)

A stunning new image of the sun has been captured by the European Space Agency (ESA)’s Solar Orbiter mission. The image shows the atmosphere around the sun, called the corona, which can reach temperatures of up to 72 million degrees Fahrenheit and is even hotter than the sun’s surface.

Solar Orbiter took a total of 200 individual images of the sun, which were stitched together into the mosaic, which is the widest high-resolution image of the sun ever taken. Together, these images show the glowing hot gas which forms the outer atmosphere of the sun and which stretches for millions of miles beyond the sun’s surface.

Recommended Videos

“Obtaining such a detailed image is no easy feat,” ESA wrote. “On 9 March 2025, at around 77 million km from the Sun, the Solar Orbiter spacecraft was oriented to point to different regions across the Sun in a 5 x 5 grid. At each pointing direction, the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument captured six images at high resolution and two wide-angle views.”

You can see the full image below, with details like the yellow arcs coming from the sun’s surface which are created by the sun’s magnetic fields. Known as coronal loops, these features are seen above areas where the sun is particularly active, as these regions have the strongest magnetic fields. These fields shape the streams of charged particles give off by the sun, also creating structures like streamers and plumes.

Other features you can see in the image include dark sunspot regions and dark filament structures which are composed of relatively cool material in the atmosphere, and which can last for days or weeks.

Solar Orbiter was launched in 2020, and since then has made a number of close approaches to the sun. It has captured some stunning images of the face of the sun using its Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument, which works in the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is beyond the violet that our eyes can see.

This image was also captured in the ultraviolet, which is how the spacecraft is able to see the details of the sun’s upper atmosphere. It created an image that is a whopping 12,544 x 12,544 pixels in size, and if you head to ESA’s website you can see a zoomable version of the image with some key features highlighted.

Georgina Torbet
Georgina has been the space writer at Digital Trends space writer for six years, covering human space exploration, planetary…
NASA is investing $590 million in private contractors to build humanity’s first Moon outpost
NASA is counting on private companies to land its Moon Base dream.
Artist impression of a Moon Base concept, with solar arrays for energy generation, greenhouses for food production, and habitats shielded with regolith.

Building a permanent base on the Moon sounds like science fiction, but NASA is making it feel a lot more real. The agency just handed $590 million in contracts to three private companies for four uncrewed lunar lander missions launching in late 2028.

These missions are part of Phase 1 of NASA's broader $30 billion Moon Base program, which needs to deliver landers, rovers, and scientific cargo up there before astronauts eventually move in. These efforts are closely tied NASA's Artemis program, which sent humans on a lunar flyby in April for the first time since the Apollo era.

Read more
Getting to Mars may require a pit stop in orbit, and NASA just tested the nozzle to make that happen
A gas pump nozzle for spacecraft sounds simple. It is not, and that's what makes this test worth paying attention to.
Architecture, Building, Factory

Getting a spacecraft to Mars or beyond requires an enormous amount of fuel, most of which has to be hauled from Earth, adding to the overall cost and weight of the spacecraft. NASA has been working on a different approach, one that could be more efficient and effective.

It wants to refuel a spacecraft in orbit before heading out for the mission. What’s even more interesting is that the space agency just finished testing a component that could make that possible: a cryocoupler.

Read more
Elon Musk’ Starlink could soon offer mobile services as a US carrier
Showcase of T-Mobile Starlink service on an iPhone.

Elon Musk’s Starlink has already changed how millions of people access the internet, especially in places where traditional broadband struggles to reach. Now, the satellite internet service could be preparing for an even bigger leap — becoming your mobile carrier.

According to a Financial Times report, SpaceX has told investors it’s considering launching a retail Starlink mobile service in the US. Instead of simply partnering with wireless carriers, the company could begin selling mobile plans directly to consumers, putting it in direct competition with Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile.

Read more