Two satellites have seen
"tsunami" spreading on the surface of the Sun after a release of
matter into space called a coronal mass ejection (CME). These
tsunami of heightened magnetic field and hot, ionised gas race across the Sun
at about 400km per second. Analysis of
the chance sighting, to be published in Solar Physics, allowed the
measurement of the magnetic field in "quiet" areas, away from the
CME. Understanding this field may help predict how CMEs will affect the Earth. And
thanks to data from Hinode, one of the two satellites, researchers may have
cracked a 70-year-old mystery as to why the Sun's surrounding corona is so much
hotter than its surface. The Japanese satellite Hinode has been studying the
Sun since 2006, joined in Earth orbit by the Solar Dynamics Observatory in
2010. Both satellites look at ultraviolet light from the Sun - colours we
cannot see but that give hints as to both the chemical makeup and the extreme
physical conditions at and near the Sun's roiling, turbulent surface. David
Long of University College London and colleagues finally spotted what are known
as EIT waves after a CME. Like a tsunami emanating from the point of a seismic
event, EIT waves are shock waves that carry magnetic fields and hot, ionised
"plasma". "These EIT waves are quite tricky - they're very
random and they're relatively rare," said Dr Long. "We need to be in
the right place at the right time; this has been a long time coming." The
SDO satellite was able to capture the ultraviolet light emitted as the wave
spread out. From that, the team was able to determine the wave's speed - some
400km per second - and its rough temperature, over a million degrees. Meanwhile
the Hinode satellite returned a high-resolution map of the density of the Sun's
surface every 45 seconds. Using both data sets, the team was able to determine
the strength of the magnetic field in the "quiet corona" - a tricky
measurement of the Sun in its typical, quiescent state. "This tells us a
lot about the nature of the Sun and what goes on in the atmosphere," Dr
Long explained. "These waves are quite important because they're
associated with CMEs that fire plasma out into the heliosphere, toward the
Earth." These CMEs can bathe the Earth with fast-moving particles that can
disrupt satellite communications or even knock out electrical power here on
Earth - but solar scientists struggle to predict their eventual effects. "Generally
we see them when there's a CME coming straight at us - but when it's coming
straight at us then it's quite difficult to measure how fast it's coming at us
or how strong it is," Dr Long said. "So by looking at these waves, we
should be able to infer how powerful these CMEs are going to be." More
observations of EIT waves will be needed to determine the exact relationship
between the waves' and the CMEs' characteristics. The Hinode satellite was also
crucial for measurements reported at this week's meeting of the Solar Physics Division of the
American Astronomical Society. Michael Hahn and Daniel Wolf Savin of Columbia
University in New York, US, used Hinode to peer at similar waves from a
"polar coronal hole" - a region where, like the pole of a bar magnet,
field lines originate and reach far above the Sun's surface. They were trying
to tackle a puzzle about the temperature of the Sun's surrounding corona. The
temperature at the Sun's core is some 15,000,000C, but its surface is below
6,000C. Yet the corona is known to be at a temperature in excess of 1,000,000C.
How the energy gets into the corona to keep up these temperatures has baffled
astronomers for more than half a century. One idea was that waves of magnetic
energy rise from below the Sun's surface, depositing energy into the corona
higher up. But what remained unclear was whether the energy was lost on its
journey. Hinode observations of the polar coronal hole have allowed the pair to
peek into this interim height and determine how the energy is coupled up from
the surface into the corona.In a
preprint on the Arxiv server they show that enough energy is
carried by these waves to keep the corona at its searing temperatures. In what can be called as an amazing phenomenon, a
speedy Tsunami has been observed on the Sun’s surface. We have seen tsunami on
earth but now two earth orbiting satellites have seen "tsunami"
spreading on the surface of the Sun
If tsunamis on Earth don’t seem terrifying enough, imagine the power of
such a monstrous wave on the sun -- bigger, faster and made of searing plasma.
Solar tsunamis, spotted initially in 1997, are caused when a coronal mass
ejection is hurled from the sun out into space. The eruption of charged matter
pushes the surrounding plasma outward, sending out a circular wave that can
travel 620 miles per second and cover half the sun’s surface in an hour, said
study lead author David Long, a solar physicist at University College London.
the researchers managed to capture two solar tsunamis
in action, rising about 43,500 miles high Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and
the Japanese Hinode spacecraft have observed a solar tsunami to provide the
first accurate estimates of the Sun's magnetic field. As the CME
travels out into space, the tsunami travels across the Sun at speeds of up to
1000 kilometres per second. Similar to tsunamis on Earth, the shape of solar
tsunamis is changed by the environment through which they move. Just as sound
travels faster in water than in air, solar tsunamis have a higher speed in
regions of stronger magnetic field. This unique feature allowed the team, led
by researchers from UCL's Mullard Space Science Laboratory, to measure the
Sun's magnetic field. Dr David Long, UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory, and
lead author of the research, said: "We've demonstrated that the Sun's
atmosphere has a magnetic field about ten times weaker than a normal fridge
magnet." Using data obtained using the Extreme ultraviolet Imaging
Spectrometer (EIS), a UK-led instrument on the Japanese Hinode spacecraft, the
team measured the density of the solar atmosphere through which the tsunami was
travelling. The combination of imaging and spectral observations provides a
rare opportunity to examine the magnetic field which permeates the Sun's
atmosphere. The combination of imaging and spectral
observations provides a rare opportunity to examine the magnetic field which
permeates the Sun's atmosphere. Visible as loops and other structures in the Sun's
atmosphere, the Sun's magnetic field is difficult to measure directly and
usually has to be estimated using intensive computer simulations. The Hinode spacecraft has three highly sensitive telescopes, which use
visible, X-ray and ultraviolet light to examine both slow and rapid changes in
the magnetic field.
The instruments on Hinode act like a microscope
to track how the magnetic field around sunspots is generated, shapes itself,
and then fades away. These results show just how sensitive these instruments
can be, measuring magnetic fields that were previously thought too weak to
detect. The explosions that produce solar tsunamis can send
CMEs hurtling towards the Earth. Although protected by its own magnetic field,
the Earth is vulnerable to these solar storms as they can adversely affect
satellites and technological infrastructure.
"As our dependency on technology increases,
understanding how these eruptions occur and travel will greatly assist in
protecting against solar activity," Long said.
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