Today.Az » Weird / Interesting » NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory spots extra energy in the sun's corona
28 July 2011 [20:16] - Today.Az
Like giant strands of seaweed some 32,000 miles high, material shooting up from the sun sways back and forth with the atmosphere. In the ocean, it's moving water that pulls the seaweed along for a ride; in the sun's corona, magnetic field ripples called Alfvén waves cause the swaying.
For years these waves were too difficult to detect directly, but
NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) is now able to track the
movements of this solar "seaweed" and measure how much energy is carried
by the Alfvén waves. The research shows that the waves carry more
energy than previously thought, and possibly enough to drive two solar
phenomena whose causes remain points of debate: the intense heating of
the corona to some 20 times hotter than the sun's surface and solar
winds that blast up to 1.5 million miles per hour.
"SDO has amazing resolution so you can actually see individual
waves," says Scott McIntosh at the National Center for Atmospheric
Research in Boulder, Colo. "Now we can see that instead of these waves
having about 1000th the energy needed as we previously thought, it has
the equivalent of about 1100W light bulb for every 11 square feet of the
sun's surface, which is enough to heat the sun's atmosphere and drive
the solar wind."
McIntosh published his research in a Nature article
appearing on July 28. Alfvén waves, he says, are actually fairly simple.
They are waves that travel up and down a magnetic field line much the
way a wave travels up and down a plucked string. The material
surrounding the sun -- electrified gas called plasma -- moves in concert
with magnetic fields. SDO can see this material in motion and so can
track the Alfvén waves.
Alfvén waves are part of a much more complex system of magnetic
fields and plasma surrounding the sun. Understanding that system could
help answer general questions such as what initiates geomagnetic storms
near Earth and more focused questions such as what causes coronal
heating and speeds of the solar wind -- a field of inquiry in which
there are few agreed-upon answers.
"We know there are mechanisms that supply a huge reservoir of energy
at the sun's surface," says space scientist Vladimir Airapetian at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "This energy is
pumped into magnetic field energy, carried up into the sun's atmosphere
and then released as heat." But determining the details of this
mechanism has long been debated. Airapetian points out that a study like
this confirms Alfvén waves may be part of that process, but that even
with SDO we do not yet have the imaging resolution to prove it
definitively.
When the waves were first observed in 2007 (more than six decades
after being hypothesized by Hannes Alfvén in 1942), it was clear that
they could in theory carry energy up from the sun's surface to its
atmosphere. However, the 2007 observations showed them to be too weak to
contain the great amounts of energy needed to heat the corona so
dramatically.
This study says that those original numbers may have been
underestimated. McIntosh, in collaboration with a team from Lockheed
Martin, Norway's University of Oslo, and Belgium's Catholic University
of Leuven, analyzed the great oscillations in movies from SDO's
Atmospheric Imagine Assembly (AIA) instrument captured on April 25,
2010.
"Our code name for this research was 'The Wiggles,'" says McIntosh.
"Because the movies really look like the sun was made of Jell-O wiggling
back and forth everywhere. Clearly, these wiggles carry energy."
The team tracked the motions of this wiggly material spewing up -- in
great jets known as spicules -- as well as how much the spicules sway
back and forth. They compared these observations to models of how such
material would behave if undergoing motion from the Alfvén waves and
found them to be a good match.
Going forward, they could analyze the shape, speed, and energy of the
waves. The sinusoidal curves deviated outward at speeds of over 30
miles per second and repeated themselves every 150 to 550 seconds. These
speeds mean the waves would be energetic enough to accelerate the fast
solar wind and heat the quiet corona. The shortness of the repetition --
known as the period of the wave -- is also important. The shorter the
period, the easier it is for the wave to release its energy into the
coronal atmosphere, a crucial step in the process.
Earlier work with this same data also showed that the spicules
achieved coronal temperatures of at least 1.8 million degrees
Fahrenheit. Together the heat and Alfvén waves do seem to have enough
energy to keep the roiling corona so hot. The energy is not quite enough
to account for the largest bursts of radiation in the corona, however.
"Knowing there may be enough energy in the waves is only one half of
the problem," says Goddard's Airapetian. "The next question is to find
out what fraction of that energy is converted into heat. It could be all
of it, or it could be 20 percent of it -- so we need to know the
details of that conversion."
In practice, that means studying more about the waves to understand
just how they impart their energy into the surrounding atmosphere.
"We still don't perfectly understand the process going on, but we're
getting better and better observations," says McIntosh. "The next step
is for people to improve the theories and models to really capture the
essence of the physics that's happening." /Science Daily/
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