CfA: Solar Corona Revealed in Super-High-Definition

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CfA: Solar Corona Revealed in Super-High-Definition

Post by bystander » Tue Jul 24, 2012 2:54 am

Solar Corona Revealed in Super-High-Definition
Center for Astrophysics | 2012 July 20
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Today, astronomers are releasing the highest-resolution images ever taken of the Sun's corona, or million-degree outer atmosphere, in an extreme-ultraviolet wavelength of light. The 16-megapixel images were captured by NASA's High Resolution Coronal Imager, or Hi-C, which was launched on a sounding rocket on July 11th. The Hi-C telescope provides five times more detail than the next-best observations by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory.

"Even though this mission was only a few minutes long, it marks a big breakthrough in coronal studies," said Smithsonian astronomer Leon Golub (Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics), one of the lead investigators on the mission.

Understanding the Sun's activity and its effects on Earth's environment was the critical scientific objective of Hi-C, which provided unprecedented views of the dynamic activity and structure in the solar atmosphere.

The corona surrounds the visible surface of the Sun. It's filled with million-degree ionized gas, or plasma, so hot that the light it emits is mainly at X-ray and extreme-ultraviolet wavelengths. For decades, solar scientists have been trying to understand why the corona is so hot, and why it erupts in violent solar flares and related blasts known as "coronal mass ejections," which can produce harmful effects when they hit Earth. The Hi-C telescope was designed and built to see the extremely fine structures thought to be responsible for the Sun's dynamic behavior.

"The phrase 'think globally, act locally' applies to the Sun too. Things happening at a small, local scale can impact the entire Sun and result in an eruption," explained Golub.

Hi-C focused on an active region on the Sun near sunspot NOAA 1520. The target, which was finalized on launch day, was selected specifically for its large size and active nature. The resulting high-resolution snapshots, at a wavelength of 19.3 nanometers (25 times shorter than the wavelength of visible light), reveal tangled magnetic fields channeling the solar plasma into a range of complex structures.

"We have an exceptional instrument and launched at the right time," said Jonathan Cirtain, senior heliophysicist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. "Because of the intense solar activity we're seeing right now, we were able to clearly focus on a sizeable, active sunspot and achieve our imaging goals."

Since Hi-C rode on a suborbital rocket, its flight lasted for just 10 minutes. Of that time, only about 330 seconds were spent taking data. Yet those images contain a wealth of information that astronomers will analyze for months to come.

"The Hi-C flight might be the most productive five minutes I've ever spent," Golub smiled.

The high-resolution images were made possible because of a set of innovations on Hi-C's telescope, which directs light to the camera detector. The telescope includes some of the finest mirrors ever made for a space mission. Initially developed at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., the mirrors were completed with inputs from partners at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory (SAO) in Cambridge, Mass., and a new manufacturing technique developed in coordination with L-3Com/Tinsley Laboratories of Richmond, Calif. The mirrors were made to reflect extreme-ultraviolet light from the Sun by Reflective X-ray Optics LLC of New York, NY, and the telescope was assembled at the SAO labs in Cambridge, Mass.

For more information about Hi-C, visit http://www.nasa.gov/topics/solarsystem/ ... s/hic.html

NASA Telescope Captures Sharpest Images of Sun's Corona
NASA | Marshall Space Flight Center | 2012 July 20

HI-C Returns Most Detailed Images Ever of the Sun’s Corona
Universe Today | Jason Major | 2012 July 23

Sun's Corona Seen In Highest Resolution Yet
Space.com | Video | 2012 July 20
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alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk.
— Garrison Keillor

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SAO: Solving a Mystery of the Sun's Corona

Post by bystander » Sat Feb 02, 2013 12:13 am

Solving a Mystery of the Sun's Corona
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
Weekly Science Update | 2013 Feb 01
The corona of the sun is the hot (over a million kelvin), gaseous outer region of its atmosphere. The corona is threaded by intense magnetic fields that extend upwards from the surface in braids that are twisted and sheared by the convective stirrings of the underlying dense atmosphere. Understanding the corona and its physical processes is essential to the development of a long-range space weather prediction capability.

The mechanisms that heat the corona are poorly understood, but are thought to be of two kinds. The first mechanism is heating from the solar interior carried to the surface by waves in the hot gas. It is thought that this "wave heating" can raise the temperature of the corona to about 1.5 million kelvin, its temperature in its quiescent phase. The active Sun, however, has sunspots and regions that can reach temperatures up to four million kelvin. This second stage of heating has been attributed to the energetic unraveling of braids of powerful magnetic fields generated by the movement of charged particles in the corona. Because proof of this mechanism relies in part on images capable of seeing these braids at work, this explanation has been difficult to verify.

CfA astronomers Leon Golub, Kelly Korreck, Mark Weber, and Patrick McCauley were key members of the team that has resolved this long-standing puzzle. The CfA scientists, in collaboration with colleagues at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, produced the finest mirrors for extreme ultraviolet light ever made for a space mission and launched them in a telescope on a sub-orbital rocket, the Hi-C mission, last July. The rocket flight lasted only 10 minutes, but the high resolution images it obtained in that time enabled the scientists to directly observe the hypothetical magnetic braid activity. Writing in the last issue of the journal Nature, the astronomers report that the sizes and activity of the braids they observe are in agreement with the properties needed for the magnetic heating theory to be correct. Although the short mission duration still leaves many unanswered questions about coronal heating, the new results are a key breakthrough in understanding the solar corona and its behavior.

Energy release in the solar corona from spatially resolved magnetic braids - J. W. Cirtain et al
Hi-C Adds Big Piece to the Solar Corona Puzzle
CfA | SAO | 2013 Jan 23

NASA Telescope Observes How Sun Stores and Releases Energy
NASA | Marshall | Hi-C | 2013 Jan 23

Sounding Rocket Flight Provides Important Clues To Coronal Heating
Lockheed Martin | 2013 Jan 23

Magnetic Sun Produces Hot Hot Heat
Science NOW | Sid Perkins | 2013 Jan 23

Magnetic 'Braids' May Cook the Sun's Corona
Discovery News | Irene Klotz | 2013 Jan 23

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Know the quiet place within your heart and touch the rainbow of possibility; be
alive to the gentle breeze of communication, and please stop being such a jerk.
— Garrison Keillor

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