Millions of US residents watched the total solar eclipse earlier this 
week, but NASA spotted the phenomenon from a different perspective.The international satellite "Hinode" dedicated to observing the sun, 
revealed the total eclipse in a way that can shed light on how the sun 
works.A group of images was captured by an x-ray telescope (XRT), above the 
Pacific Ocean off the west coast of the United States, at an altitude of
 about 422 miles (680 km).NASA
 said the images could help reveal the secrets of the sun. "They 
prepared the solar eclipse observatory to add new data to the ongoing 
scientific study of the coronal structure in the polar region of the 
sun, as well as the mechanism of moving the plasma rays.
 The Hinode 
satellite is a joint venture between the Japan Space Exploration Agency 
and Japan's National Astronomical Observatory, as well as the European 
Space Agency, the British Space Agency and NASA.
Hinode was 
launched in September 2006, where the mission includes a set of 3 
scientific equipment: the solar optical telescope, the X-ray telescope, 
and the ultraviolet imaging spectrometer.
This equipment is dedicated to studying the generation, transmission and dissipation of magnetic energy from the photosphere into the corona, and how to release energy stored in the magnetic field of the sun, either gradually or violently.
This equipment is dedicated to studying the generation, transmission and dissipation of magnetic energy from the photosphere into the corona, and how to release energy stored in the magnetic field of the sun, either gradually or violently.
 On Monday, August 21, the
 United States saw its first total eclipse from the coast to the coast 
since World War I, where millions of Americans gathered to watch this 
spectacular 90-minute astronomical phenomenon.
Observers took advantage of the event to be the most photographed eclipse in history, documented by high-altitude satellites, as well as most viewed through telescopes, cameras and protective glasses on the ground.
Observers took advantage of the event to be the most photographed eclipse in history, documented by high-altitude satellites, as well as most viewed through telescopes, cameras and protective glasses on the ground.
 

 
 
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