For the first time, the entire Sun is being imaged all at once. This has become possible because the two
STEREO satellites orbiting and monitoring the Sun are now on opposite sides of the Sun. The two satellites have been
drifting apart, as expected, since their
launch in 2006, since one satellite orbits slightly closer to the Sun than the other. The
above image shows nearly the entire Sun as it appeared one day last week, a few days before maximum exposure. Yesterday, the dark gap in the center closed completely, and
STEREO was able to beam back to Earth full 360 degree images of the
closest star. Full solar images are useful scientifically for a number of reasons, including catching rapidly evolving flares, coronal mass ejections, tsunamis, and filaments, no matter where they occur on the Sun, as well as monitoring days-long sunspots and active regions without losing them as they rotate out of view. Even though the
STEREO satellites will continue to drift apart at about 44 degrees per year,
Sun-staring instruments on or near the Earth will augment them to provide a full
view of the Sun for the next several years.