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
(Page 3 of 5)
“This bubble of gas blowing off is 30 times Earth’s diameter, moving at a million miles an hour,” Title says, pointing on the screen to an expanding red vortex caught by SDO soon after the satellite’s launch. And, he notes almost casually, this was a fairly minor eruption.
Magnetic fields keep the Sun’s gases in line as they arch into space, Title says, much as a bar magnet puts iron filings into neat patterns. The more tangled the fields become, the less stable they are. Solar outbursts happen when the magnetic fields snap into a new pattern—an event that physicists call “reconnection.”
A typical solar outburst expelled toward Earth, called a coronal mass ejection, might contain ten billion tons of charged gas racing across space. “You have to imagine a set of forces sufficient to launch all of the water in the Mississippi River to a velocity 3,000 times faster than a jet plane flies, in 15 to 30 seconds,” he says, pausing a moment to let that sink in. “There is no counterpart to this on Earth. We have trouble explaining these processes.”
Previous solar missions took fuzzy snapshots of large coronal mass ejections. Other telescopes zoomed in for fine details but could focus on only a tiny portion of the Sun. SDO’s high resolution of an entire hemisphere of the Sun and its rapid-fire recordings reveal how the surface and atmosphere change minute to minute. Some features are so unexpected that the scientists haven’t yet named them, such as a corkscrew-like pattern of gas that Schrij-ver traces on the screen with his finger. He thinks it’s a spiraling magnetic field seen along its edge, lacing through gas as it ascends into space. “It’s like [the gas] is being lifted in slings,” he says.
Before the mission was a year old, the scientists had analyzed hundreds of events, covering many thousands of hours. (The August 1 eruptions, they found, were linked by magnetic “fault zones” spanning hundreds of thousands of miles.) The team is working under pressure, from NASA and elsewhere, for better forecasts of space weather.
“Good Lord, this is complicated,” says Schrijver, playing a movie of the Sun’s mood on another day. “There is no quiet day on the Sun.”
A few miles away, on the campus of Stanford, solar physicist Philip Scherrer is wrestling with the same question that animates the Lockheed Martin group: Will we be able to predict when the Sun will cataclysmically hurl charged gas toward Earth? “We’d like to give a good estimate whether a given active region will produce flares or mass ejections, or if it will just go away,” he says.
Scherrer, who uses a satellite downlink for television reception, explains the impact of space weather by recalling an event in 1997. “One Saturday, we woke up and all we saw was fuzz,” he says. A coronal mass ejection had swept past Earth the night before. The magnetic cloud apparently took out the Telstar 401 satellite used by UPN and other networks.
“I took that personally, because it was ‘Star Trek’ [I was unable to watch],” Scherrer says with a wry smile. “If it had happened on the morning of the Super Bowl, everyone would have known about it.”
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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