Sun-Observing Spacecraft Sheds Light on the Solar Wind’s Origin

The solar wind is a ubiquitous feature of our solar system. This relentless high-speed flow of charged particles from the sun fills interplanetary space. On Earth, it triggers geomagnetic storms that can disrupt satellites and it causes the dazzling auroras — the northern and southern lights — at high latitudes.

But precisely how the sun generates the solar wind has remained unclear. New observations by the Solar Orbiter spacecraft may provide an answer.

Researchers on Thursday said the spacecraft has detected numerous relatively small jets of charged particles expelled intermittently from the corona — the sun’s outer atmosphere — at supersonic speeds for 20 to 100 seconds.

The jets emanate from structures on the corona called coronal holes where the sun’s magnetic field stretches into space rather than back into the star. They are called “picoflare jets” due to their relatively small size. They arise from areas a few hundred miles wide — tiny when compared to the immense scale of the sun, which has a diameter of 8,65,000 miles (1.4 million km).

“We suggest that these jets could actually be a major source of mass and energy to sustain the solar wind,” said solar physicist Lakshmi Pradeep Chitta of the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research in Germany, lead author of the research published in the journal Science.

The solar wind consists of plasma — ionized gas, or gas in which the atoms lose their electrons — and is mostly ionized hydrogen.

“Unlike the wind on Earth that circulates the globe, solar wind is ejected outward into interplanetary space,” Chitta said.

“Earth and the other planets in the solar system whiz through the solar wind as they orbit around the sun. Earth’s magnetic field and atmosphere act as shields and protects life by blocking harmful particles and radiation from the sun. But the solar wind continuously propagates outward from the sun and inflates a plasma bubble called the heliosphere that encompasses the planets,” Chitta added.

The heliosphere extends out to about 100 to 120 times further than Earth’s distance to the sun.

The data for the study was obtained last year by one of the three telescopes on an instrument called the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager aboard the Solar Orbiter, a sun-observing probe built by the European Space Agency and the US space agency NASA that was launched in 2020. The Solar Orbiter was about 31 million miles (50 million km) from the sun at the time — about a third of the distance separating the sun and Earth.

“This finding is important as it sheds more light on the physical mechanism of the solar wind generation,” said solar physicist and study co-author Andrei Zhukov of the Royal Observatory of Belgium.

The solar wind’s existence was predicted by American physicist Eugene Parker in the 1950s and was verified in the 1960s.

“Still, the origin of the solar wind remains a longstanding puzzle in astrophysics,” Chitta said. “A key challenge is to identify the dominant physical process that powers the solar wind.”

The Solar Orbiter is discovering new details about the solar wind and is expected to obtain even better data in the coming years using additional instruments and viewing the sun from other angles.

Zhukov said stellar wind is a phenomenon common to most, if not all, stars, though the physical mechanism may differ among various types of stars.

“Our understanding of the sun is much more detailed than the understanding of other stars, due to its proximity and thus the possibility to make more detailed observations,” Zhukov added.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


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Researchers Reveal How Mars Has Discreet Auroras Without Presence of Global Magnetic Field

Auroras are natural light displays, forming dynamic patterns of brilliant lights in the Earth’s sky because of disturbances in the magnetosphere caused by the solar wind — jet of charged particles coming from the Sun. The magnetosphere is an area of space controlled by a planet’s magnetic field. Except Mercury, almost all planets in the solar system have auroras. However, things get a little interesting on Mars. Unlike Earth, the Red Planet does not have a global magnetic field that plays a crucial role in the formation of auroras. Mars has spots of local, induced magnetism. As per the latest research, these localised magnetic fields interact with the solar wind in interesting ways to produce Mars’s discrete (or structured) ultraviolet auroras.

Scientists at the University of Iowa, US, know that discrete auroras form on Mars, just like on Earth. But they did not know how they formed, especially in the absence of a global magnetic field. They now report that discrete auroras on the Red Planet are governed by the localised interaction between the solar wind and magnetic fields generated by the crust on Mars – unlike Earth, where auroras appear when particles from the solar wind collide with Earth’s magnetosphere.

“We have the first detailed study looking at how solar wind conditions affect auroras on Mars,” claimed physicist and astronomer Zachary Girazian of the University of Iowa.

“Now is a very fruitful and exciting time for researching auroras on Mars. The database of discrete aurora observations we have from MAVEN is the first of its kind, allowing us to understand basic features of the aurora for the first time,” Girazian added.

The researchers have published their findings in the Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics after more than 200 observations of discrete auroras on Mars by the NASA-led Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) spacecraft.

According to the research, auroras form on all other planets as a result of the complex interaction between their magnetic fields and solar winds. But Mars’s global magnetic field decayed a long time ago, leaving behind only patches of magnetism preserved in the crust.


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