. Space Industry and Business News .




.
SOLAR SCIENCE
New Ways to Measure Magnetism Around the Sun
by Karen C. Fox - NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 15, 2011

The brighter area represents the edge of the coronal mass ejection - a large slinky-like structure known as a flux rope - while the fainter area beyond that represents the bow shock. Measuring the distance between these two can help scientists measure the magnetic field strength in the corona. Credit: Gopalswamy/Astrophysical Journal Letters.

Those who study the sun face an unavoidable hurdle in their research - their observations must be done from afar. Relying on images and data collected from 90 million miles away, however, makes it tough to measure the invisible magnetic fields sweeping around the sun.

Scientists must learn more about these fields because they are crucial to understanding how coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, travel through space - sometimes toward Earth where they can damage satellites. Now NASA researchers have made use of old mathematical techniques and new insights on how CMEs travel to devise a fresh way to measure this magnetic environment in the sun's upper atmosphere, the corona.

"The magnetic field is the skeleton of the entire heliosphere, guiding how particles and CMEs move toward Earth," says solar physicist Nat Gopalswamy of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. He says researchers routinely measure the fields near the sun's surface, but haven't been able to do as well further out in the sun's atmosphere.

"Before, we've only been able to measure it in the upper corona with a technique that required exact conditions. Our new method can be used more consistently."

Indeed, this new method can be used any time there's a good side view of a CME, Gopalswamy explains in a new paper that will appear in the July 20 issue of the Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The mathematical relationship between how an object moves through gas and the bow shock it creates - that's the region of compressed and distorted gas that flows around a fast-moving object, much like the shock created by a supersonic jet - has been understood since the 1960s. When an object moves through gas that is electrically charged, known as "plasma," that movement also corresponds to the strength of the magnetic field.

The problem in the solar environment was spotting a CME's bow shock as it traveled through the upper corona. In that part of the sun's atmosphere, scientists weren't finding the signature ring around a CME that signified a bow shock in images closer to the sun.

But on March 25, 2008, the sun provided a perfect test case: a CME traveling at three million miles per hour and reported by several NASA spacecraft including the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) and the two Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory (STEREO) spacecraft.

From the perspective of both SOHO and STEREO-A, the CME appeared to be bursting off the horizon, or limb, of the sun. Limb events like this offer the side-view needed to best watch how a CME develops over time.

Gopalswamy realized that the shock could indeed be seen in standard white light images in these pictures, it just didn't look like what he expected. Given how tenuous the solar atmosphere is, the shocks were much less precise than usual, drifting out raggedly from the main event. "They don't stay close to the CME," says Gopalswamy. "They escape from the edges of the ejection and fizzle out as the CME slows down."

For the March 25 event, the team spotted the contours of a diffuse ring around the edges of the CME. From there determining the strength of the magnetic fields was a fairly simple math problem. The distance between the CME and the bow shock, as well as the CME's radius of curvature, all give information about the medium through which the shock moves - much the way one might analyze the speed and shape of a wave to determine whether it's moving through water or something thicker like oil.

In this case, the speed of the shock can be used to find what's known as the "Alfven speed" of the medium. Alfven speed governs how fast waves can propagate through plasma the same way sound speed governs how sound travels through differing mediums like water or air.

Indeed, much like the sound barrier, Alfven speed determines how fast something can travel through a magnetized field before creating a shock. Once this speed is known, the strength of the magnetic field itself can be determined.

This mathematical technique had previously been incorporated into other studies where one could spot a more well-defined bow shock and used to do such things as determine the position of Earth's shock or to better understand the curvature of a CME.

"This is a testament to how the different subdisciplines of heliophysics can be integrated," says Joe Gurman, who is the project scientist for SOHO and STEREO. "Here we see a method originally developed to study Earth's magnetic environment extended first to understand interplanetary CMEs and CMEs very near the Sun, and now to measure the magnetic field in the corona."

To help confirm the method, Gopalswamy and his co-author on the paper, Seiji Yashiro of Goddard and Catholic University, took measurements of the field strength at various distances from the sun. This range agreed with other estimates, adding to the team's belief that this could be a useful technique for future measurements.

Added to other information about the corona that is easier to obtain such as particle density, temperature and magnetic field direction, measuring the magnetic field strength can help round out a picture of the environment around the sun despite collecting data from over 90 million miles away.

"Knowledge of the magnetic field is crucial for all attempts to understand the physics of space weather," says Gurman. "And it's especially gratifying to see both STEREO and SOHO - the fifteen-year-old workhorse of the Heliophysics observing system - being used together to improve that picture."

This research was supported by NASA's Living With A Star Program, which provides missions to improve our understanding of how and why the Sun varies, how the Earth and Solar System respond, and how the variability and response affects humanity in Space and on Earth.




Related Links
-
Solar Science News at SpaceDaily

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



SOLAR SCIENCE
Dark Fireworks on the Sun
Hunstville AL (SPX) Jul 13, 2011
On June 7, 2011, Earth-orbiting satellites detected a flash of X-rays coming from the western edge of the solar disk. Registering only "M" (for medium) on the Richter scale of solar flares, the blast at first appeared to be a run-of-the-mill eruption--that is, until researchers looked at the movies. "We'd never seen anything like it," says Alex Young, a solar physicist at the Goddard Space ... read more


SOLAR SCIENCE
Earnings-outlook spry at 100-year-old IBM

25 Tesla, world-record 'split magnet' makes its debut

U.S. watches helium stockpile dwindle

Kakao is sweet for S. Korean smartphone users

SOLAR SCIENCE
Raytheon BBN Technologies Awarded DoD Contract to Develop a Secure, Attributed Military Network System

Northrop Grumman's On-Demand Intelligence System Used for the First Time

Lockheed Martin Team Delivers Joint Tactical Radio to the U.S. Government for Integration into First Aircraft Platform

Celebrating 10 years of Artemis

SOLAR SCIENCE
Russia sends observation satellite into space

ILS Proton Successfully Launches the SES-3 Satellite for SES

Russia launches 2 foreign satellites into orbit

NASA inks agreement with maker of Atlas V rocket

SOLAR SCIENCE
Second Boeing GPS IIF Satellite Sends First Signals from Space

Boeing: 2nd Boeing GPS IIF Satellite Ready for Launch from Cape Canaveral

Apple makes first S. Korea payout over tracking

A new algorithm could help prevent midair collisions

SOLAR SCIENCE
Flight Options buys Embraer executive jets

Aerospace plant opened in Romania

DLR examines the benefits of sectorless airspace

Boeing Values India Market for 1320 New Airplanes at 150 Billion Dollars

SOLAR SCIENCE
Soft Memory Device Opens Door To New Biocompatible Electronics

Expert help from a distance

NIST prototype optics table on a chip places microwave photon in 2 colors at once

Light propagation controlled in photonic chips marks major breakthrough in telecommunications field

SOLAR SCIENCE
Aura Satellite Measures Pollution Butterfly from Fires in Central Africa

Tsunami airglow signature could lead to early detection system

Strong El Nino could bring increased sea levels, storm surges to US East Coast

Underwater Antarctic Volcanoes

SOLAR SCIENCE
Mideast lung disease up with chemical wars

Hungary presents new homes to toxic spill families

Baghdad chlorine gas leak causes panic

Mongolia herder on mission to tackle mining firms


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement