For the first time, scientists can observe temperature
changes in the Sun's outer atmosphere thanks to new technology introduced by
NASA’s CODEX instrument. This animated, color-coded heat map shows temperature
changes over the course of a couple days, where red indicates hotter regions
and purple indicates cooler ones.
NASA/KASI/INAF/CODEX
Key Points:
- NASA’s CODEX investigation
captured images of the Sun’s outer atmosphere, the corona, showcasing new
aspects of its gusty, uneven flow.
- The CODEX instrument,
located on the International Space Station, is a coronagraph — a
scientific tool that creates an artificial eclipse with physical disks —
that measures the speed and temperature of solar wind using special
filters.
- These
first-of-their-kind measurements will help scientists improve models of
space weather and better understand the Sun’s impact on Earth.
Scientists analyzing data from NASA’s CODEX (Coronal Diagnostic Experiment) investigation have successfully evaluated the instrument’s first images,
revealing the speed and temperature of material flowing out from the Sun. These
images, shared at a press event Tuesday at the American Astronomical Society
meeting in Anchorage, Alaska, illustrate the Sun’s outer atmosphere, or corona,
is not a homogenous, steady flow of material, but an area with sputtering gusts
of hot plasma. These images will help scientists improve their understanding of
how the Sun impacts Earth and our technology in space.
“We really never had the ability to do
this kind of science before,” said Jeffrey Newmark, a heliophysicist at NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, and the principal
investigator for CODEX. “The right kind of filters, the right size
instrumentation — all the right things fell into place. These are brand new
observations that have never been seen before, and we think there’s a lot of
really interesting science to be done with it.”
The Sun continuously radiates material in the form of
the solar wind. The Sun’s magnetic field shapes this material, sometimes
creating flowing, ray-like formations called coronal streamers. In this view
from NASA’s CODEX instrument, large dark spots block much of the bright light
from the Sun. Blocking this light allows the instrument's sensitive equipment
to capture the faint light of the Sun’s outer atmosphere.
NASA/KASI/INAF/CODEX
NASA’s CODEX is a solar coronagraph, an instrument often employed to study
the Sun’s faint corona, or outer atmosphere, by blocking the bright face of the
Sun. The instrument, which is installed on the International Space Station,
creates artificial eclipses using a series of circular pieces of material
called occulting disks at the end of a long telescope-like tube. The occulting
disks are about the size of a tennis ball and are held in place by three metal
arms.
Scientists often use coronagraphs
to study visible light from the corona, revealing dynamic features, such
as solar
storms, that shape
the weather in space, potentially impacting Earth and beyond.
NASA missions use coronagraphs to study the Sun in
various ways, but that doesn’t mean they all see the same thing. Coronagraphs
on the joint NASA-ESA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) mission look at
visible light from the solar corona with both a wide field of view and a
smaller one. The CODEX instrument’s field of view is somewhere in the middle,
but looks at blue light to understand temperature and speed variations in the
background solar wind.
In this composite image of overlapping solar observations, the center and left
panels show the field-of-view coverage of the different coronagraphs with
overlays and are labeled with observation ranges in solar radii. The third
panel shows a zoomed-in, color-coded portion of the larger CODEX image. It highlights
the temperature ratios in that portion of the solar corona using CODEX 405.0
and 393.5 nm filters.
NASA/ESA/SOHO/KASI/INAF/CODEX
“The CODEX instrument is doing something
new,” said Newmark. “Previous coronagraph experiments have measured the density
of material in the corona, but CODEX is measuring the temperature and speed of
material in the slowly varying solar wind flowing out from the Sun.”
These new measurements allow scientists
to better characterize the energy at the source of the solar wind.
The CODEX instrument uses four
narrow-band filters — two for temperature and two for speed — to capture solar
wind data. "By comparing the brightness of the images in each of these
filters, we can tell the temperature and speed of the coronal solar wind,” said
Newmark.
Understanding the speed and temperature
of the solar wind helps scientists build a more accurate picture of the Sun,
which is necessary for modeling and predicting the Sun’s behaviors.
“The CODEX instrument will impact space
weather modeling by providing constraints for modelers to use in the future,”
said Newmark. “We’re excited for what’s to come.”
by
NASA Science Editorial Team
NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center,
Greenbelt, Md
CODEX is a collaboration between NASA Goddard Space Flight Center and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute (KASI) with additional contribution from Italy's National Institute for Astrophysics (INAF).
Source: NASA's CODEX Captures Unique Views of Sun's Outer Atmosphere - NASA Science
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