GODMOTHER. The SHOCKING announcement about the SUN that SCARED the Internet

GODMOTHER. The Americans made a shocking announcement about the sun, and it scared the whole internet, here's what's happening in the galaxy, and how it affects us all.

NASA. The Americans made a truly shocking announcement about the Sun, and this while they have been studying the star in our galaxy for some time, but only now have they made this frightening discovery. According to those from NASA, the Sun regularly sends interplanetary shock waves to all the planets and stars in our galaxy, and the American space agency was able to detect them only now for the first time, which is remarkable.

NASA. To detect these shocks that are sent by the Sun, the space agency used four spacecraft that have been orbiting the Earth since 2015, moving through the Earth's magnetosphere. The ships were meant to study the Earth's magnetic reconnection, but instead they discovered for NASA that the Sun sends shock waves through the entire galaxy, and these could have a very dangerous potential if they have high integrity.

GODMOTHER. The SHOCKING announcement about the SUN that SCARED the Internet

NASA. Researchers are of the opinion that a source for these shock waves produced by the sun could be the solar winds, which emit radiation, heat and kinetic energy throughout the galaxy, reaching the Earth as well. According to those from NASA, the sun regularly emits shock waves of this kind, together with the radiation of its winds, and these affect the planets and stars with which it comes into contact, in a certain radius.

NASA. The speed with which these shock waves travel is very high, one of the American ships detected it when it passed by it in just half a second, so we are talking about a very high power. The stars and planets closest to the Sun are most affected by these shock waves, according to NASA, but of course the Earth also suffers from them, but fortunately not so much.

NASA. Thanks to its ships, the American space agency will continue to monitor what happens with these shock waves, and will provide more details about them when they are available.