The crew of the International Space Station (ISS) received a "warning"
that they were being asked to move to a special bunker that was
equipped at the emergency station after a blast on the sun on September
10.In
an interview with Russian news agency Novosti, the director of the
Institute of Nuclear Physics at the Moscow State University, Mikhail
Panasiuk, told the Russian news agency Novosti that "any fault in the
station's equipment caused by explosions on the sun poses a danger to
astronauts, Life in the station for various faults. "According to the Russian scientist, the level of proton radiation
begins to increase as the station approached the area of influence of
the sun. The sun is experiencing the strongest explosion since 2005Another severe blast on the sun occurred at 7 pm on September 10
Moscow time, the fourth consecutive blast, since the beginning of
September.The explosions were preceded by another M-series. On September 6, a powerful explosion was the most powerful explosion
in the past 12 years. On September 7, a powerful explosion of the "X"
type occurred, followed by another severe explosion on September 8.Explosions
on the sun throw huge energy into the space around it, which is
estimated at hundreds of billions of megatonatts, equivalent to one
fifth of the sun's energy in a second, or the energy that mankind can
produce using modern technology in a million years.
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