NASA’s PUNCH (Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere) mission has released its first images of large solar eruptions called coronal mass ejections, or CMEs. The images were presented Tuesday at the 246th American Astronomical Society meeting in Anchorage, Alaska.
From late May to early June 2025, PUNCH’s three Wide
Field Imagers captured views of coronal mass ejections, or CMEs, traveling out
from the Sun into the solar system. The CMEs can be seen moving in all
directions, including directly at the camera. The constellation Orion is
visible at the bottom left, Venus can be seen at the far right, and Jupiter to
the left of center. The bright object that leaves the frame on the left at the
beginning of the video is the Moon. The small yellow dot at the center denotes
the Sun, and the dashed white line around it represents the field of view of
LASCO C3, an earlier coronagraph still used to forecast space weather aboard
NASA-ESA’s SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory).
NASA/SwRI
The images, stitched into a video, show
giant CMEs, growing as they travel across the inner solar system. The mission’s
highly sensitive, wide-field instruments were able to capture the whole CMEs,
as they evolved in space, in much greater detail than previously possible. This
big-picture view is essential to helping scientists better understand and
predict space weather, which is driven by CMEs and can disrupt communications,
endanger satellites, and create auroras at Earth.
The series of new images also show
Venus, Jupiter, several constellations including Orion, and the Pleiades
star cluster. The Moon can also be seen in the sequence of images.
The images were taken with PUNCH’s four cameras, which work together as a single “virtual instrument.” Three Wide Field Imagers, which observe the faint, outermost portion of the Sun’s atmosphere and solar wind (the continual stream of charged particles from the Sun), work with a Narrow Field Imager (NFI), a coronagraph which allows scientists to see details in the Sun’s atmosphere by blocking out the bright light of the Sun itself. A still image from NFI reveals the intricate, detailed structure of a CME departing the Sun on June 3. The four cameras are hosted across PUNCH’s four satellites.
The Narrow Field Imager (NFI) camera, mounted on one
of the four spacecraft of NASA’s PUNCH mission, imaged a large coronal mass
ejection (CME) in exquisite detail on June 3, 2025. The CME can be seen rising
in the center of the image, above the blocked-out Sun. This preliminary image
includes artifacts of early processing but reveals NFI’s ability to image the
Sun’s outer corona in great detail, in conjunction with the rest of PUNCH.
NASA/SwRI
“These first images are astonishing, but
the best is still yet to come,” said Craig DeForest, PUNCH principal
investigator from Southwest Research Institute’s Solar System Science and
Exploration Division in Boulder, Colorado. “Once the spacecraft are in their
final formation, we’ll be able to routinely track space weather in 3D across
the entire inner solar system.”
Throughout its two-year planned mission,
PUNCH will make global, continuous, 3D observations of the Sun’s outer
atmosphere and the inner solar system. This information will help scientists
understand how material released from the solar atmosphere forms the solar
wind. The mission will also provide scientists with new data about how
potentially disruptive events from the Sun, like solar flares and CMEs, form
and evolve. This information could lead to more accurate predictions about the
arrival of space weather at Earth and how it impacts assets and explorers in
space.
Southwest Research Institute, based in
San Antonio, Texas, leads the PUNCH mission and operates the four spacecraft
from its facilities in Boulder, Colorado. The mission is managed by the
Explorers Program Office at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt,
Maryland, for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in
Washington.
By
Mara Johnson-Groh
NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA’s PUNCH Releases Its First Images of Huge Eruptions from Sun - NASA Science
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