For new Sun-watching spacecraft, the first solar eruption is always special.
On February 12, 2021, a little more than a year from its launch, the European Space Agency and NASA’s Solar Orbiter caught sight of
this coronal mass ejection, or CME. This view is from the mission’s SoloHI
instrument — short for Solar Orbiter Heliospheric Imager — which watches the
solar wind, dust, and cosmic rays that fill the space between the Sun and the
planets.
It's a brief, grainy view: Solar Orbiter’s remote
sensing won’t enter full science mode until November. SoloHI used one of its
four detectors at less than 15% of its normal cadence to reduce the amount of
data acquired. Still, a keen eye can spot the sudden blast of particles, the
CME, escaping the Sun, which is off camera to the upper right. The CME starts
about halfway through the video as a bright burst – the dense leading edge of
the CME – and drifts off screen to the left.
The first coronal mass
ejection, or CME, observed by the Solar Orbiter Heliospheric Imager (SoloHI)
appears as a sudden gust of white (the dense front from the CME) that expands
into the solar wind. This video uses difference images, created by subtracting
the pixels of the previous image from the current image to highlight changes.
The missing spot in the image on the far right is an overexposed area where
light from the spacecraft solar array is reflected into SoloHI’s view. The
little black and white boxes that blip into view are telemetry blocks – an
artifact from compressing the image and sending it back down to Earth.
Credits: ESA &
NASA/Solar Orbiter/SoloHI team/NRL
For SoloHI, catching this CME was a happy accident. At the time the
eruption reached the spacecraft, Solar Orbiter had just passed behind the Sun
from Earth’s perspective and was coming back around the other side. When the
mission was being planned, the team wasn’t expecting to be able to record any
data during that time.
“But since we planned this out, the ground stations and the technology have
been upgraded,” said Robin Colaninno, principal investigator for SoloHI at the
US Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C. “So we actually got more
downlink time for the mission than what was originally scheduled.” So SoloHI
winked on – and caught its first CME.
Two more imagers on Solar Orbiter – ESA’s Extreme Ultraviolet Imager and
Metis – also captured views of the CME. Read more for ESA’s
coverage of the event.
NASA’s STEREO-A spacecraft, short for Solar Terrestrial Relations
Observatory, also caught a glimpse from its COR2 detector, which blocks out the
Sun’s bright disk to see otherwise faint phenomena in the solar wind.
The first CME witnessed
by Solar Orbiter’s Solar Orbiter Heliospheric Imager, as seen from NASA’s Solar
Terrestrial Relations Observatory-A spacecraft.
Credits:
NASA/STEREO/COR2
Back on Earth, NASA’s Moon to Mars Space Weather Analysis Office modeled
the CME to trace its trajectory through the solar system. The positions of Solar
Orbiter, marked with a red diamond, and STEREO-A, a red square, reveal their
different vantage points.
The modeled path of the
CME observed by SoloHI on February 12, 2021. The plot on the far left shows the
Sun as a white circle in the center, and the inner planets and some spacecraft
appear in their positions in orbit. The center and right panels show different
angles of the same model, focusing on Earth.
Credits: NASA’s Goddard
Space Flight Center/M2M/CCMC
NASA spacecraft have been watching CMEs for decades, but Solar Orbiter is
still a game-changer. “We've realized in the last 25 years that there's a lot
that happens to a CME between the surface of the Sun and Earth,” said
Colaninno. “So we're hoping to get much better resolution images of all of
these outflows by being closer to the Sun.”
Solar Orbiter has already taken the closest picture of
the Sun to date, and it will only get closer. Solar
Orbiter’s official mission begins in November, when SoloHI and the rest
of the remote-sensing instruments will be switched on in
full science mode. Stay tuned!
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2021/a-new-space-instrument-captures-its-first-solar-eruption
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