Something New Under the Sun
Scientists are probing deep beneath the surface of our nearest star to calculate its profound effect on Earth
- By Robert Irion
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2011, Subscribe
On an uncharacteristically tropical morning in the San Francisco Bay Area, the ground shimmers with waves of heat, and it’s impossible to look to the sky without squinting. But the real heat is inside the Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Laboratory in Palo Alto. There, in a dark room stacked with computer processors, a high-definition view of the Sun fills nine conjoined TV screens to create a seven-foot-wide, theater-quality solar extravaganza.
Solar physicist Karel Schrijver types commands to start the show: an accelerated movie of a sequence of explosions that wracked the Sun on August 1, 2010. “This is one of the most stunning days I’ve ever seen on the Sun,” Schrijver says. He’s been looking at our nearest star for two decades.
“At the beginning this tiny little region decides it’s not happy,” he says, sounding like an astronomical psychiatrist coping with solar neuroses. He points to a flare, a modest spasm of whitish light. “Then, this nearby region begins to get unhappy, and it flares. Then a huge filament erupts and cuts through the [magnetic] field like a knife. We see this arc of glowing material, and it grows with time. A little filament under the arc says, ‘I don’t like that one bit,’ and it becomes unstable and goes off.”
Who knew the Sun has so much personality?
Within hours—sped up to minutes in the digitized replay—much of its magnetic field “gets upset,” Schrijver says, and rearranges itself, unleashing flares and vast belches of magnetized gas. The chain reaction is more vivid than any Hollywood depiction. “When we show these movies to our colleagues for the first time,” says Schrijver, “the professional expression is generally, ‘Whoa!’”
The torrent of images comes from the most advanced satellite ever to study the Sun: NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory, or SDO. Launched in February 2010, SDO stares at the star from a point 22,300 miles above Earth. The satellite’s orbit keeps it at a steady position in view of two radio antennas in New Mexico. Every second, 24 hours a day, SDO beams 18 megabytes of data to the ground. The high-resolution pictures, as well as maps of the Sun’s tortured magnetic fields, show the genesis of sunspots and the origins of their outbursts.
This solar movie should provide new insights into space weather—the impacts felt on Earth when the Sun’s ejections head our way. Sometimes the weather is mild. The August 1, 2010, eruptions set off colorful displays of aurora borealis over the United States two days later when a fast-moving storm of charged gas disturbed Earth’s magnetic field. But when the Sun truly gets angry, the northern lights can signal potentially disabling threats.
The most intense solar storm ever recorded struck in the summer of 1859. British astronomer Richard Carrington observed a giant network of sunspots on September 1, followed by the most intense flare ever reported. Within 18 hours, Earth was under magnetic siege. Dazzling northern lights glowed as far south as the Caribbean Sea and Mexico, and sparking wires shut down telegraph networks—the Internet of the day—across Europe and North America.
A magnetic storm in 1921 knocked out the signaling system for New York City’s rail lines. A solar storm in March 1989 crippled the power grid in Quebec, depriving millions of customers of electricity for nine hours. And in 2003, a series of storms caused blackouts in Sweden, destroyed a $640 million Japanese science satellite and forced airlines to divert flights away from the North Pole at a cost of $10,000 to $100,000 each.
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Comments (4)
Once again, a brilliantly balanced article of creative flair and scientific fact.
Posted by Holly Dunlea on September 24,2011 | 06:10 AM
Helge: I would like to thank you for sharing the video link. It's truly a stunning compilation -- tens of thousands of still images! Breathtaking to view in full-screen resolution, as you advised. I've passed on the link to my colleagues in science writing. Thank you again!
--Robert Irion / article author
Posted by Robert Irion on March 31,2011 | 06:56 PM
Hello,
I read your article and it was great.
One of my photo buddies made this excellent time-lapse of the Aurora Borealis that might interest you all:
http://vimeo.com/21419634
Check it out and play it BIG wide screen
Posted by Helge Mortensen on March 28,2011 | 09:39 AM
I miss seeing those lights. MN and AK. Now I'm in CO, so thanks, and watch them dance for me!
Posted by Leif on March 24,2011 | 11:48 AM