* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download A startling new Sun
Equation of time wikipedia , lookup
X-ray astronomy satellite wikipedia , lookup
History of Solar System formation and evolution hypotheses wikipedia , lookup
Timeline of astronomy wikipedia , lookup
Astronomical unit wikipedia , lookup
Tropical year wikipedia , lookup
Formation and evolution of the Solar System wikipedia , lookup
Energetic neutral atom wikipedia , lookup
Solar System wikipedia , lookup
Geomagnetic storm wikipedia , lookup
Solar physics A startling new Sun 3.10 here is only one star that we can observe from 5 microparsec – our Sun, which is of enormous scientific interest in its own right, and also continues to be of great importance for Solar System science and astronomy as a whole. Many basic questions about the Sun have not yet been answered and many fundamental space and cosmic plasma processes can be studied there in detail. The satellite SOHO is bringing an unprecedented wealth of data about the Sun, making it possible for solar physicists to address these questions in depth. The results confirm some ideas but may also spring some surprises. T 1367.0 1996 1997 1998 J F M A M J J A S O N D J F M A M J J A S O N D Jaaa 1366.5 solar irradiance (Wm2) S OHO, the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, is a collaborative ESA/NASA mission with ESA as the senior partner, and was launched on 2 December 1995. On 14 February 1996 it reached the first Lagrangian point (L1), which is four times as far from us as the Moon and 1% of the distance to the Sun where the gravitational pulls of the Earth and the Sun balance. SOHO is observing the Sun continuously in unprecedented detail with a suite of instruments. They are giving the first comprehensive view of the Sun from the deep interior through the different layers of the atmosphere and out into the solar wind. The interior of the Sun consists of a core, where the energy is being generated, and a convection zone, where the convectively unstable plasma is highly turbulent. The atmosphere comprises three layers: a cool surface layer, the photosphere, at a temperature of about 6000 K; the warmer and rarer chromosphere at about 104 K; and the very much hotter corona at 2–5 MK that stretches to the Earth and beyond. In the photosphere you see sunspots, dark regions where strong magnetic flux tubes poke through the solar surface. The photosphere rotates more rapidly near the equator than near the poles. In the chromosphere, you see bright active regions around sunspots and also prominences, which are strange flux tubes (actually located up in the corona but at chromospheric temperatures) full of cold, dense plasma. In addition, you sometimes see huge eruptions of mass and magnetic flux associated with erupting prominences that may be either in active regions (and associated with solar flares) or outside active regions. The corona consists of magnetically open coronal holes (along which the fast solar wind escapes) and also magnetically closed coronal loops (which contain the plasma). The key unanswered puzzles are: ● What is the nature of the solar interior and the dynamo that generates the Sun’s magnetic field in a cyclic manner? ● How is the corona heated to 2–5 MK? ● What is the origin of magnetic eruptions (coronal mass ejections)? ● How is the solar wind accelerated? SOHO was designed to try and answer these major unsolved problems in solar physics which are of great importance for astrophysics as a whole. It has a suite of 11 instrument packages (A&G 39/2 26). The interior is studied indirectly by means of global oscillations measured in velocity and intensity by the VIRGO, 1366.0 1365.5 1365.0 1364.5 0 200 400 Days since 0 January 1996 600 1 The solar irradiance from VIRGO as a function of time (courtesy C Frölich). GOLF and MDI instruments; the atmosphere is investigated by EUV spectrometers, an imager and coronagraphs called EIT, SUMER, CDS, UVCS and LASCO; and the solar wind is sampled by in situ measurements with CELIAS, COSTEP, ERNE and SWAN. The UK is playing a large and active part in the mission, having a principal investigator (R Harrison) for one and co-investigators for most of the other instruments. The preliminary results are quite breathtaking (Solar Physics 170 1–205; 175 207–799) and will clearly revolutionize our understanding of many aspects of solar physics. It is impossible to review them all here, so I shall just give a few examples. The solar interior The VIRGO instrument (Variability of solar IR radiance and Gravity Oscillation) led by Claus Fröhlich (Davos) aims to determine the characteristics of low-l p-modes (i.e. long-wavelength global sound waves) from irradiance variations. It has found also by measuring the solar irradiance as a function of time (figure 1) that the “solar constant” is far from constant from day to day. Also the irradiance level is beginning to increase with the start of the new sunspot cycle. GOLF (Global Oscillations at Low Frequency) led by Alan Gabriel (Paris) aims to deduce the deep internal structure of the Sun from the velocity variation of low-l p-modes and to try and detect g-modes (gravity oscillations) for the first time. It is an instrument that measures Doppler shifts of sodium-D lines and has produced exceptionally noise-free p-mode spectra; June 1998 Vol 39 Solar physics from SOHO Eric Priest summarizes results from the satellite SOHO that are changing our basic understanding of the Sun. the Sun’s magnetic field. Furthermore, they have ruled out the possibility of a rapidly rotating core and any significant solar-cycle variation of the oblateness. Other MDI studies have revealed that the surface of the Sun is covered with a “magnetic carpet” of positive and negative magnetic fragments continually emerging, cancelling, merging and fragmenting in such a way that the magnetic flux is replaced every 40 hours! The transition region and low corona 2 A Moreton wave observed on a series of difference images from EIT, where light shows the addition and dark the subtraction of plasma (courtesy D Moses). the solar noise at low frequencies (where g-modes are expected) is a factor of 10 smaller than expected. If we compare six months data for the spectrum from the ground with only two months from VIRGO, the advantage in going to space is clear: the noise is much lower and spurious signals (sidebands) disappear because of the uninterrupted viewing. A surprise from a wavelet analysis is that, when you follow individual modes in time, you find that individual p-modes wander in frequency. The third helioseismology instrument on SOHO is MDI (Michelson Doppler Imager) led by Phil Scherrer (Stanford), which detects modes of much higher l (smaller wavelength) than VIRGO and GOLF. It does so by measuring the velocity at a million points on the solar surface every minute. Seismological inversion techniques have been used to deduce the sound speed squared as a function of radius throughout the interior. The difference between the observations and a standard model is extremely small, typically June 1998 Vol 39 0.2%, but they show an unexpected peak at the base of the convection zone. This is probably due to a deficit in helium there, produced somehow by mixing. MDI observations have also been used to deduce the rotation rate inside the Sun. At the surface the Sun rotates more rapidly near the equator than near the poles. So what happens inside the Sun? The expectation was that the rotation would be constant on cylinders parallel to the rotation axis, so that in planes through the axis the lines of constant period would be straight lines parallel to the axis. However, the observations were a great surprise – instead the rotation is constant on radial lines (i.e. cones) throughout the convection zone, and uniformly rotating below the convection zone (A&G 39/2 26). There is, therefore, an intense shear layer at the base of the convection zone, which is likely to drive instabilities and turbulence and to be the agent that mixes up the helium, as was required for the sound speed peak. Indeed, this shear layer is probably the site of the dynamo that generates The EIT (EUV Imaging Telescope) led by JeanPièrre de la Boudinière (Paris) aims to produce global images of the transition region and corona up to 1.5 solar radii at a spatial resolution of 5 arcsec. The instrument uses multilayered normal incidence EUV optics to register EUV lines in HeII, FeIX, FeXII and FeXI and so produces images at four different temperatures. At coronal temperatures you see many X-ray bright points continually sparkling like jewels, and coronal loops dynamically evolving and occasionally erupting. As well as providing global images that other instruments can use, it has observed sources of the fast solar wind and of coronal mass ejections. Over the poles you see in detail for the first time the location of the source of the fast solar wind as plumes or interplume regions streaming out from magnetic sources, sometimes in a dynamic time-dependent manner. The plumes arise from small unipolar magnetic sources on chromospheric network boundaries and are denser and cooler than the surrounding coronal hole. Also the beginning of a coronal mass ejection shows up as the formation of a coronal void and the outward propagation of a bright shell, namely a Moreton wave (figure 2). In another study, the initiation of a huge coronal mass ejection was found to be associated with a small prominence activation before it erupted. SUMER (Solar UV Measurements of Emitted Radiation) led by Klaus Wilhelm (Lindau) aims to use emission lines to deduce physical properties of the transition region and corona (temperature, density, abundance, velocities) at high spatial, spectral and temporal resolution, and so to provide new insights on coronal heating and solar wind generation mechanisms. It has observed: explosive events with speeds of about 150 km s–1, several thousand of which are present on the Sun per minute; the abundance of low FIP elements (i.e. with first ionization potential lower than 10 eV) enriched in the corona by factors of 1–20 3.11 Solar physics c 150 a –60 km/s 0 km/s 50 km/s counts/px 100 50 b 0 628.5 629.0 629.5 630.0 wavelength (Å) 630.5 3 Flows in an active region loop system from CDS. a EIT image, Fe XII 195A, 27 July 1997. b Monochromatic image from CDS, 27 July 1996. c CDS line profiles. (Courtesy P Brekke.) HI Lyman-α O VI 600 V1/e (km s–1) V1/e (km s –1) 250 200 150 400 200 V1/e (TH = Te ) V1/e ( TO = Te ) 100 0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 ρ/R! 3.5 4.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 ρ/R! 3.0 3.5 4 Line-of-sight line widths in a polar coronal hole from UVCS (courtesy J Kohl). relative to the photosphere; non-thermal velocities that are associated with coronal heating by MHD turbulence in quiet regions. The CDS (Coronal Diagnostics Spectrometer) led by Richard Harrison (Rutherford Appleton Lab) has the same aim as SUMER, but it uses normal and grazing incidence spectrometers in the EUV range 150–785 Å (Harrison 1995). This instrument is able to deduce the temperature, density and velocity in many structures. It can take the atmosphere to pieces and inspect the different temperature regimes, deducing the density from line ratios and the velocity from Doppler shift and broadenings. It finds that the transition region and corona are highly dynamic with numerous small regions having velocities of 50 km s–1 or up to 3.12 300–400 km s–1 in explosive events. In addition, low-energy microflares called blinkers have been discovered by Harrison at transition region temperatures with intensity increases by a factor of 3 for typically 13 minutes located at network junctions. An example of the power of the instrument can be seen in figure 3, which analyses the flows in an active-region loop system observed at the limb (global Sun top left, close up bottom left). Line profiles (right) at different points reveal that plasma at point A is moving towards you at 60 km s–1, whereas plasma at C is moving away at 50 km s–1. The outer corona The UVCS (Ultra-Violet Coronagraph Spectrometer) team, led by John Kohl (Harvard) aims to measure the properties of the solar wind and identify the mechanisms that accelerate it. A great surprise is that in a polar coronal hole, between 1.5 and 3.5 R while the proton outflow velocity increases from 50 to 200 km s–1, the line-widths of Lyman-α increase from 190 km s–1 up to 250 km s–1, but those of OVI increase much more dramatically from 100 km s–1 to 600 km s–1 (figure 4), which suggests an ion cyclotron resonance by MHD waves that creates an anisotropic velocity distribution, with v⊥ larger than v. In addition, the oxygen outflow velocity becomes about twice as large as the proton velocity. The line widths in plumes are lower than in interplume regions by 10–30 km s–1. One study suggests that the slow solar wind originates in so-called stalks near the axes of coronal streamers. Another surprise is the low emission of O VI in a long-lived coronal streamer, where gravitational settling is producing a lowering of the abundance of oxygen by an order of magnitude. LASCO (Large-Angle Spectroscopic Coronagraph) led by Guenther Brueckner (Washington) aims to image and analyse the corona for the first time out to 30 R from the Sun. It has three overlapping coronagraphs called C1, C2 and C3 and has discovered global halo events. In addition, it has explored the detailed properties of great eruptions of mass and magnetic flux called coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Helmet streamers are often found to bend towards the equatorial plane. Further out, they merge into one large equatorial “streamer sheet” clearly discernible out to 30 R. With LASCO occasionally you also see Kreutz sungrazing comets and it has observed the disconnection of magnetic structures during CMEs. Perhaps the most surprising discovery from LASCO is that many of these huge mass ejections (with ten times as much mass than was thought before) are global or halo events (figure 5), in which the ejection is not just in one direction but goes out on both sides of the Sun and presumably also towards us. Occasionally they reach the Earth and have far-reaching effects: for example, a coronal mass ejection that started on 6 January 1997 reached the Earth on 10 January and caused a communications black-out, together with the permanent disabling of a new $200 million communications satellite – this was especially annoying because Star Trek was being broadcast on one of the TV channels at the time! What happened was that charge from the radiation belts built up on the satellite and then fried the circuits when it discharged. We are now beginning to be able to forecast such events, but clearly some care is needed in public relations, as evidenced by the reaction to a NASA person who went on TV after watching one CME start its two- or three-day journey to June 1998 Vol 39 Solar physics the Earth last April and reportedly said: “At this very moment a coronal mass ejection is hurtling towards the Earth like a missile!” 5 Coronal mass ejection seen in the C3 coronagraph of LASCO (courtesy G Simnett). The solar wind The CELIAS (Charge Element and Isotope Analysis) instrument is led by Peter Bochsler (Berne) and Dietrich Hovestadt (Garching) and has detected many elements and isotopes for the first time. COSTEP (Comprehensive SupraThermal and Energetic Particle Analyser) led by H Kunow (Kiel) and ERNE (Energetic and Relativistic Nuclei and Electrons) led by J Torsti (Turku) together make up the CEPAC consortium, which is measuring energetic particle events, both from co-rotating interaction regions in the solar wind and from active regions on the Sun as well as an anomalous cosmic ray component. Furthermore, SWAN (Solar Wind ANisotropies) led by J Bertaux (Verrière) has measured the global solar wind mass flux from the Sun’s UV radiation illuminating the cavity in the interstellar hydrogen cloud. Figure 6 is a map of interstellar hydrogen glowing in Lyman-α from SWAN in which hot stars show up as white points and the asymmetry in intensity is caused by the motion of the Sun at 26 km s–1 through the interstellar cloud. Conclusions SOHO is clearly a brilliant success and is producing major breakthroughs in our understanding of the Sun. Progress on the large questions is as follows: ● For the solar interior, the structure and properties of the convection zone have been determined and the probable location of the dynamo identified, but the structure of the core is uncertain and g-modes have not yet been detected. ● Part of the coronal heating problem has been solved. There are several mechanisms at work: magnetic reconnection has been shown to heat X-ray bright points; large-scale diffuse loops are probably heated in an MHD turbulent manner (Priest et al. 1998a); but how small loops and coronal holes are heated is not known. ● The solar wind consists of two parts: the fast solar wind in coronal holes may well be accelerated by ion-cyclotron resonance, but the role of plumes is not yet known; the slow solar wind is a mystery, but is highly dynamic and has a higher contribution from coronal mass ejections than thought before. ● Prof. E R Priest, Dept of Mathematical and Computational Sciences, St Andrews University, St Andrews KY16 9SS. The figures are courtesy of the SOHO VIRGO, MDI, EIT, SUMER, CDS, UVCS, LASCO and SWAN consortia. SOHO is a project of international co-operation between ESA and NASA. References Antonucci E et al. 1997 in The Corona and Solar Wind near June 1998 Vol 39 90 upwind: direction from which the interstellar breeze comes no data (safety) Sun: source of solar wind 0 downwind: void in the interplanetary hydrogen stars of the Milky Way 90 100 200 300 400 500 600 17 March 1996 ecliptic co-ordinates 700 800 6 Map of interstellar hydrogen from SWAN (courtesy J Bertaux). Minimum Activity ESA SP-404, Noordwijk 175–182. Appourchaux T et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 27–41. Bertaux J L et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 737–770. Bochsler P et al. 1997 Proc. 5th SOHO Workshop Oslo 37–43. Brekke P et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 143–161. DeForest C E et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 393–410. Fröhlich C et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 1–25. Gabriel A H et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 207–226. Habbal S R et al. 1997 Astro-phys. J. 489 L103–L106. Harrison R A et al. 1995 Solar Phys. 162 233–290. Harrison R A et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 123–141. Kohl J L et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 613–644. Kosovichev A G et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 43–61. Kuhn J R et al. 1997 Proc. of IAU Symposium 181 103–110. Lemaire P et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 105–122. Mason H E et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 143–161. Moses D et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 571–599. Priest E R et al. 1998 Nature in press. Raymond J C et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 645–665. Schrijver C J et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 329–340. Schwenn R et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 667–684. Simnett G et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 685–698. Torsti J et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 175 179–191. Wilhelm K et al. 1997 Solar Phys. 170 75–104. 3.13