References to popular articles published in 2000:
NEWSPAPER ARTICLES:
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Scientists open an eye on the sun.
By: Douglas Birch, The Baltimore Sun, 11 January 2000.
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SUN STUDIES MAY SHED LIGHT ON GLOBAL WARMING.
By: CURT SUPLEE, The Washington Post, 9 October 2000.
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Images Show Heating Source of Sun's Atmosphere.
By: Kathy Sawyer, The Washington Post, 26 September 2000.
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Solar Theory is Scorched.
By: Dan Vergano, USA Today, 27 September 2000.
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Scientists Begin to Unravel a Stubborn Solar Mystery.
By: Peter N. Spotts, The Christian Science Monitor, 27 September
2000.
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Fire in the Sky.
By: Mark Alpert, Scientific American, July 2000.
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Solar flare-ups: the 11-year cycle is peaking again, and scientists
don't know how big, or disruptive, the effects may be.
By: Faye Flam, The Philadelphia Inquirer, 2 October 2000.
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Able to See Dark Side of Sun: Spotting storms on star's other side
would forecast power disruptions.
By: Earl Lane (Newsday), New York Newsday, 10 March 2000.
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Opening a View to the Far Side of the Sun, Researchers Develop a
Sonar-Like System To See Through Our Star, Warn of Sunspots.
By: Curt Suplee, The Washington Post, 10 March 2000.
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Seeing sunspots: Sun nears peak of 11-year cycle of activity.
By: Taylor Rushing, Baton Rouge Advocate, 16 April 2000.
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Peering through sun may let experts forecast solar flares.
By: Jeff Nesmith, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 12 March 2000.
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Experts seeking ways to predict solar storms: electrical, data
systems affected.
By: Earl Lane (Newsday), The Commercial Appeal (Memphis), 19 March
2000.
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Solar storms could be y2k pest. NASA hopes to launch an armada of
spacecraft to study, monitor sun. Strong bursts of energy can
disrupt life on earth.
By: Earl Lane (Newsday), Akron Beacon Journal, 16 March 2000.
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Solar storms: as sunspots reach a peak again, Earth faces
disruptions from bad weather of a different sort.
By: Scott Allen (Boston Globe), San Jose Mercury News,
22 February 2000.
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Space-age forecasters watch for solar storms.
By: Keay Davidson, San Francisco Examiner, 16 June 2000.
MAGAZINE ARTICLES:
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Spacecraft sounds out the sun's hidden half.
By: Ron Cowen, Science News, v. 157(12), p. 183, 18 March 2000.
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The heavens and the deep blue sea.
By: Francesco Santini, University of Toronto.
Rotunda, The Magazine of the Royal Ontario Museum (Winter 2000), p. 24.
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Space weather: physics and forecasts.
By: Janet Luhmann, Space Sciences Lab, UC Berkeley.
Physics World, vol. 13, no. 7, p. 31 (July 2000).
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Peeking behind the sun.
By: John S. MacNeil
U.S. News & World Report, June 5, 2000, v128, i22, p61.
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White-Light Adventures on the Sun.
By: Gary Seronik.
Sky & Telescope (Observer's Notebook), September 2000, v100, i3, p122.
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Model Tracks Storms from the Sun.
By: R. Cowen
Science News, June 24, 2000, v157, i26, p404
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Craft find where sun's corona gets its hots.
By: R. Cowen.
Science News, September 30, 2000, v158, i14, p214
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Are solar eruptions triggered a loopy way?
By: R. Cowen
Science News, April 15, 2000, v157, i16, p245
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Solar Update: Seeing Moss and the Whole Sun.
By: Andrea Gianopoulos
Astronomy, June 2000, v28, i6, p26
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Arsenal of the Sun.
By: Mark D. Uehling.
Popular Science, February 2000, v256, i2, p52.
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Curtain Call.
By: Thomas Hayden
Astronomy, January 2000, v28, i1, p45
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When the Solar Wind Blows: Business looks brisk for Jo Ann
Joselyn, who predicts the weather in space.
By: Katy Human
Astronomy, January 2000, v28, i1, p56.
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Quaking Sun: A pioneer in the field of helioseismology, Jack
Harvey unveils the sun's dynamic interior.
By: Tony Ortega.
Astronomy, January 2000, v28, i1, p60.
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Underground Astronomer: Ray Davis gave an active gold mine
a second job - as a neutrino telescope.
By: Marcia Bartusiak.
Astronomy, January 2000, v28, i1, p64
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The Sunny Side of Stargazing.
By: Phil Harrington.
Astronomy, January 2000, v28, i1, p100.
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SIMULATING SOLAR PRIMINENCES IN THE LABORATORY.
By: PAUL M. BELLAN (Caltech).
American Scientist, March 2000, v88, i2,
p136.
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Solar Storms: The Silent Menace.
By: Sten Odenwald (Raytheon ITSS, NASA/GSFC).
Sky & Telescope, March 2000, p50.