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Magnetic
Field Uses Sound Waves to Ignite Sun's Ring of Fire
05/29/07
Research explains
century-old mystery about the interior of the sun
Researchers
have found that the sun's magnetic field allows the release
of wave energy from its interior, permitting sound waves to
travel through thin fountains, or "spicules",
upward and into the chromosphere. The chromosphere is the
region of the sun that looks like a red ring of fire during
an eclipse.
Credit:
Zina Deretsky, National Science Foundation
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Sound waves escaping the
sun's interior create fountains of hot gas that shape and power a
thin region of the sun's atmosphere which appears as a ruby red
"ring of fire" around the moon during a total solar
eclipse, according to research funded by the National Science
Foundation (NSF) and NASA.
The results are presented today
at the American Astronomical Society's Solar Physics Division
meeting in Hawaii.
This region, called the
chromosphere because of its color, is largely responsible for the
deep ultraviolet radiation that bathes the Earth, producing the
atmosphere's ozone layer.
It also has the strongest solar
connection to climate variability.
"The sun's interior
vibrates with the peal of millions of bells, but the bells are
all on the inside of the building," said Scott McIntosh of
the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo., lead member
of the research team. "We've been able to show how the sound
can escape the building and travel a long way using the magnetic
field as a guide."
The new result also helps
explain a mystery that's existed since the middle of the last
century -- why the sun's chromosphere (and the corona above) is
much hotter than the visible surface of the star. "It's
getting warmer as you move away from the fire instead of cooler,
certainly not what you would expect," said McIntosh.
"Scientists have long
realized that observations of solar magnetic fields are the keys
that will unlock the secrets of the sun's interior," said
Paul Bellaire, program director in NSF's division of atmospheric
sciences, which funded the research. "These researchers have
found an ingenious way of using magnetic keys to pick those
locks."
Using spacecraft, ground-based
telescopes, and computer simulations, the results show that the
sun's magnetic field allows the release of wave energy from its
interior, permitting the sound waves to travel through thin
fountains upward and into the solar chromosphere. The magnetic
fountains form the mold for the chromosphere.
Researchers say that it's like
standing in Yellowstone National Park and being surrounded by
musical geysers that pop up at random, sending out shrill sound
waves and hot water shooting high into the air.
"This work finds the
missing piece of the puzzle that has fascinated many generations
of solar astronomers," said Alexei Pevtsov, program
scientist at NASA. "If you fit this piece into place, the
whole picture of chromosphere heating becomes more clear."
Over the past twenty years,
scientists have studied energetic sound waves as probes of the
Sun's interior because the waves are largely trapped by the sun's
visible surface -- the photosphere. The research found that some
of these waves can escape the photosphere into the chromosphere
and corona.
To make the discovery, the team
used observations from the SOHO and TRACE spacecraft combined
with those from the Magneto-Optical filters at Two Heights, or
MOTH, instrument in Antarctica, and the Swedish 1-meter Solar
Telescope on the Canary Islands.
The observations gave detailed
insights into how some of the trapped waves and their pent-up
energy manage to leak out through magnetic "cracks" in
the photosphere, sending mass and energy shooting upwards into
the atmosphere above.
By analyzing motions of the
solar atmosphere in detail, the scientists observed that where
there are strong knots in the Sun's magnetic field, sound waves
from the interior can leak out and propagate upward into its
atmosphere.
"The constantly evolving
magnetic field above the solar surface acts like a doorman
opening and closing the door for the waves that are constantly
passing by," said Bart De Pontieu, a scientist at the
Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory in Palo Alto,
Calif.
These results were confirmed by
state-of-the-art computer simulations that show how the leaking
waves propel fountains of hot gas upward into the sun's
atmosphere, and fall back to its surface a few minutes later.
Other research team members are
Stuart Jeffries of the University of Hawaii and Viggo Hansteen of
the University of Oslo and the Lockheed Martin Solar and
Astrophysics Laboratory.
Source:
NSF

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