On Sept. 5, 2022, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe soared gracefully through one of the most powerful coronal mass ejections (CMEs) ever recorded – not only an impressive feat of engineering, but a huge boon for the scientific community. Parker’s journey through the CME is helping to prove a 20-year-old theory about the interaction of CMEs with interplanetary dust, with implications for space weather predictions. The results were recently published in The Astrophysical Journal.
A 2003 paper theorized
that CMEs may interact with interplanetary dust in orbit around our star and
even carry the dust outward. CMEs are immense eruptions from the Sun’s outer
atmosphere, or corona, that help drive space weather, which can endanger
satellites, disrupt communications and navigation technologies, and even knock
out power grids on Earth. Learning more about how these events interact with
interplanetary dust could help scientists better predict how quickly CMEs could
travel from the Sun to Earth, forecasting when the planet could see their
impact.
Parker has now observed this phenomenon for the first
time.
“These interactions between CMEs and dust were
theorized two decades ago, but had not been observed until Parker Solar Probe
viewed a CME act like a vacuum cleaner, clearing the dust out of its path,”
said Guillermo Stenborg, an astrophysicist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics
Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, and lead author on the paper. APL built
and operates the spacecraft.
This dust is made up of tiny particles from asteroids,
comets, and even planets, and is present throughout the solar system. A type of
faint glow called zodiacal light, sometimes visible before sunrise or after
sunset, is one manifestation of the cloud of interplanetary dust.
The CME displaced the dust all the way out to about 6
million miles from the Sun – about one-sixth of the distance between the Sun
and Mercury – but it was replenished almost immediately by the interplanetary
dust floating through the solar system.
In-situ observations from Parker were critical to this
discovery, because characterizing dust dynamics in the wake of CMEs is
challenging from a distance. According to the researchers, Parker’s
observations could also provide insight into related phenomena lower down in
the corona, such as coronal dimming caused by low-density areas in the corona
that often appear after CMEs erupt.
Scientists observed the interaction between the CME
and dust as decreased brightness in images from Parker’s Wide-field Imager for
Solar Probe (WISPR) camera. This is because interplanetary dust reflects light,
amplifying brightness where the dust is present.
Parker Solar Probe’s Wide Field Imagery for Solar
Probe (WISPR) camera observes as the spacecraft passes through a massive
coronal mass ejection on Sept. 5, 2022. Coronal mass ejections are immense
eruptions of plasma and energy from the Sun’s corona that drive space weather.
Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Naval Research Lab
To locate this occurrence of decreased brightness, the team had to compute
the average background brightness of WISPR images across several similar orbits
– sifting out normal brightness variations that occur due to solar streamers and
other changes in the solar corona.
“Parker has orbited the Sun four times at the same distance, allowing us to
compare data from one pass to the next very well,” Stenborg said. “By removing
brightness variations due to coronal shifts and other phenomena, we were able
to isolate the variations caused by dust depletion.”
Because scientists have only observed this effect in connection with the
Sept. 5 event, Stenborg and the team theorize that dust depletion may only
occur with the most powerful CMEs.
Nevertheless, studying the physics behind this interaction may have
implications for space weather prediction. Scientists are just starting to
understand that interplanetary dust affects the shape and speed of a CME. But
more studies are needed to understand these interactions better.
Parker completed its sixth Venus flyby, using the planet’s gravity to sling
itself even closer to the Sun for its next five close approaches. This occurs
as the Sun itself is approaching solar maximum, the period in the Sun’s 11-year
cycle when sunspots and solar activity are most abundant. As the Sun’s activity
increases, scientists hope to have the opportunity to see more of these rare
phenomena and explore how they might affect our Earth environment and the
interplanetary medium.
Parker Solar Probe was developed as part of NASA’s Living With a Star
program to explore aspects of the Sun-Earth system that directly affect life
and society. The Living With a Star program is managed by the agency’s Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, for NASA’s Science Mission
Directorate in Washington. APL designed, built, and operates the spacecraft and
manages the mission for NASA.
By Ashley Hume
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
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