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A telescope's powerful new tool may offer a better way to predict solar storms

An image captured by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawaii shows sunspots on the star's surface.
VTF/KIS/NSF/NSO/AURA
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The National Solar Observatory (NSO)
An image captured by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawaii shows sunspots on the star's surface.

The most powerful solar telescope in the world has recorded a major milestone atop an active volcano in Hawaii, capturing a detailed image of a cluster of sunspots with the telescope's new Visible Tunable Filter (VTF).

Scientists hope that in the future the instrument will help predict powerful and potentially damaging solar storms.

The Daniel K. Inouye Telescope snapped the photo of the roaring star late last month from the summit of the Haleakalā volcano in Maui.

The National Solar Observatory (NSO), which operates the telescope, said that the image was taken during technical testing and that the VTF is not yet even fully operational. But the fact that the telescope was able to capture such an image at this phase shows how powerful the device will eventually be.

The Visible Tunable Filter's (VTF) etalon, pictured here, consists of two reflecting plates, employed for measuring small differences in the flux of light for different wavelengths using the interference it produces.
KIS / The National Solar Observatory (NSO)
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The National Solar Observatory (NSO)
The Visible Tunable Filter's (VTF) etalon, pictured here, consists of two reflecting plates, employed for measuring small differences in the flux of light for different wavelengths using the interference it produces.

The NSO describes sunspots as "areas of intense magnetic activity" that can trigger solar flares and coronal mass ejections — phenomena that can have damaging effects on Earth's radio communications and electrical grids.

"After all these years of work, VTF is a great success for me," said Thomas Kentischer, co-principal investigator at Germany's Leibniz Institute for Solar Physics, where the VTF was designed.

"I hope this instrument will become a powerful tool for scientists to answer outstanding questions on solar physics," Kentischer added.

NSO and KIS engineers and scientists work on the Visible Tunable Filter (VTF) inside the Coudé Lab at the Inouye Solar Telescope.
NSF/NSO/AURA / The National Solar Observatory (NSO)
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The National Solar Observatory (NSO)
NSO and KIS engineers and scientists work on the Visible Tunable Filter (VTF) inside the Coudé Lab at the Inouye Solar Telescope.

Matthias Schubert, a project scientist at the institute, spoke poetically of the highly technical device.

"The significance of the technological achievement is such that one could easily argue the VTF is the Inouye Solar Telescope's heart, and it is finally beating at its forever place," he said.

The NSO described the sun as "a plasma laboratory right on our doorstep" and said that the VTF's image gives promise that with time, the telescope will help scientists better predict when powerful solar storms are coming toward Earth in order to mitigate the damage these geomagnetic disturbances might cause.

While the team of researchers hailed the success of the telescope, the road to its construction was marked by years of protests against the placement of yet another massive device on what many native Hawaiians view as sacred land.

Copyright 2025 NPR

The National Science Foundation Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, on Maui's Haleakalā, is the largest solar telescope in the world.
/ National Solar Observatory (NSO), AURA, NSF
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National Solar Observatory (NSO), AURA, NSF
The National Science Foundation Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, on Maui's Haleakalā, is the largest solar telescope in the world.

Alana Wise
Alana Wise is a politics reporter on the Washington desk at NPR.