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International
Spacecraft Reveals Detailed Processes on the Sun
03/21/07
WASHINGTON
- NASA released on Wednesday never-before-seen images that show
the sun's magnetic field is much more turbulent and dynamic than
previously known. The international spacecraft Hinode, formerly
known as Solar B, took the images.
Taken
by Hinode's Solar Optical Telescope on Jan. 12, 2007, this
image of the sun reveals the filamentary nature of the
plasma connecting regions of different magnetic polarity.
Hinode captures these very dynamic pictures of the
chromosphere. The chromosphere is a thin "layer"
of solar atmosphere "sandwiched" between the
visible surface, photosphere, and corona.
(Hinode
JAXA/NASA)
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The
sun and its atmosphere consist of several zones or layers.
From the inside out, the solar interior consists of the
core, the radiative zone, and the convection zone. The solar
atmosphere is made up of the photosphere, the chromosphere,
a transition region, and the corona. Beyond the corona is
the solar wind, which is actually an outward flow of coronal
gas. Because astronomers cannot see inside the sun, they
have learned about the solar interior indirectly. Part of
their knowledge is based on the observed properties of the
sun as a whole. Some of it is based on calculations that
produce phenomena in the observable zones.
(NASA)
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Hinode, Japanese for
"sunrise," was launched Sept. 23, 2006, to study the
sun's magnetic field and how its explosive energy propagates
through the different layers of the solar atmosphere. The
spacecraft's uninterrupted high-resolution observations of the
sun will have an impact on solar physics comparable to the Hubble
Space Telescope's impact on astronomy.
"For the
first time, we are now able to make out tiny granules of hot gas
that rise and fall in the sun's magnetized atmosphere," said
Dick Fisher, director of NASA's Heliophyics Division, Science
Mission Directorate, Washington. "These images will open a
new era of study on some of the sun's processes that effect
Earth, astronauts, orbiting satellites and the solar
system."
Hinode's three primary instruments, the
Solar Optical Telescope, the X-ray Telescope and the Extreme
Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer, are observing the different
layers of the sun. Studies focus on the solar atmosphere from the
visible surface of the sun, known as the photosphere, to the
corona, the outer atmosphere of the sun that extends outward into
the solar system.
"By coordinating the measurements
of all three instruments, Hinode is showing how changes in the
structure of the magnetic field and the release of magnetic
energy in the low atmosphere spread outward through the corona
and into interplanetary space to create space weather," said
John Davis, project scientist from NASA's Marshall Space Flight
Center, Huntsville, Ala.
Space weather involves the
production of energetic particles and emissions of
electromagnetic radiation. These bursts of energy can black out
long-distance communications over entire continents and disrupt
the global navigational system.
"Hinode images are
revealing irrefutable evidence for the presence of
turbulence-driven processes that are bringing magnetic fields, on
all scales, to the sun's surface, resulting in an extremely
dynamic chromosphere or gaseous envelope around the sun,"
said Alan Title, a corporate senior fellow at Lockheed Martin,
Palo Alto, Calif., and consulting professor of physics at
Stanford University, Stanford, Calif.
Hinode is a
collaborative mission led by the Japan Aerospace Exploration
Agency and includes the European Space Agency and Britain's
Particle Physics Astronomy Research Council. The National
Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Tokyo, developed the Solar
Optical Telescope, which provided the fine-scale structure views
of the sun's lower atmosphere, and developed the X-ray Telescope
in collaboration with the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
of Cambridge, Mass. The X-ray Telescope captured the rapid,
time-sequenced images of explosive events in the sun's outer
atmosphere.
"By following the evolution of the solar
structures that outline the magnetic field before, during and
after these explosive events, we hope to find clear evidence to
establish that magnetic reconnection is the underlying cause for
this explosive activity," said Leon Golub of the Smithsonian
Astrophysical Observatory. The Marshall Space Flight Center
manages the development ofthe scientific instrumentation provided
for the mission by NASA, industry and other federal agencies.
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Hinode's
Solar Optical Telescope (SOT) provides crystal-clear images
of features on the sun's surface. This video shows a whirl
of a new developing sunspot colliding with an existing spot
that explodes into a major solar flare. This solar flare,
captured on December 13, 2006, produced high-energy protons
that reached the Earth at the time of STS-116 Space Shuttle
flight. The flare is shown in three different wavelengths.
(NASA/JAXA)
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Sunspots
contain a strong magnetic field. Scientists believe that
this magnetic field is generated by flows of plasma and gas
deep below the surface of the sun, in the process called a
dynamo. With Hinode, scientists discovered a new class of
dynamo, referred to as a "chaotic dynamo" that is
visible on the surface of the sun, called the photosphere.
(NASA/JAXA)
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Hinode
captures this very dynamic movie of the chromosphere. The
chromosphere is a thin "layer" of solar atmosphere
"sandwiched" between visible surface, photosphere,
and corona. The chromosphere is the source of ultraviolet
radiation. Before these images, scientists thought the
chromosphere was a motionless "layer." Hinode
shows that this description is obsolete. The observatory
reveals a chromosphere that appears as constantly moving
field lines like grassland with tall grass swaying under the
wind. (NASA/JAXA)
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The
large frame shows a solar flare on the limb of the sun taken
by Hinode's Solar Optical Telescope (SOT). The small box
shows the same flare captured by the X-ray Telescope (XRT).
The combination of these two images shows how interconnected
and dynamic are the processes throughout the solar
atmosphere. (NASA/JAXA)
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The
sun's outer atmosphere, known as corona, is the spawning
ground for the largest explosions in the solar system. By
combining observations from Hinode's optical, X-ray, and
Extreme Ultraviolet imaging instruments, scientists will be
able to study how changes in the sun's magnetic field
trigger powerful solar flares and coronal mass ejections
that affect the Earth. (NASA/JAXA)
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Source:
NASA / JPL
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