Scientists with NASA’s Parker Solar Probe mission have uncovered significant new clues about the origins of the solar wind – a continual stream of charged particles released from the Sun that fills the solar system.
Observations from multiple space and ground-based observatories show the solar wind could be largely fueled by small-scale jets, or “jetlets,” at the base of the corona – the Sun’s upper atmosphere. This finding is helping scientists better understand the 60-year-old mystery of what heats and accelerates the solar wind.
“This new data shows us how the solar wind gets going at its source,” said Nour Raouafi, the study lead and the Parker Solar Probe project scientist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland. “You can see the flow of the solar wind rising from tiny jets of million-degree plasma all over the base of the corona. These findings will have a huge impact on our understanding of the heating and acceleration of the coronal and solar wind plasma.”
Understanding the solar wind is fundamental to our understanding of our solar system and others throughout the universe – and is the primary science goal of the Parker Solar Probe mission. Made of electrons, protons, and heavier ions, the solar wind courses through the solar system at roughly 1 million miles per hour. When the solar wind interacts with Earth’s magnetic field, it can create stunning auroras as well as disruptions in GPS and communications systems. Over time, the solar wind, and stellar winds in other solar systems, can also affect the composition and evolution of planetary atmospheres – even influencing planets’ habitability.
A composite video from NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory and NOAA’s Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite – R Series Solar Ultraviolet Imager instrument shows small-scale jetlet activity at the base of the solar corona, or the Sun’s upper atmosphere, and its extension to higher altitudes. This can be seen in the wavy structures emanating from the surface of the Sun. The observations were made over the course of approximately 10 hours on April 28, 2021. Credits: NASA/SDO/GOES-R
Strength in Numbers
At Earth, the solar wind is usually a constant breeze. Scientists have
therefore been looking for a steady source at the Sun that could continually
power the solar wind. However, the new findings – accepted for publication in
the Astrophysical Journal and published on
the ArXiv, an online preprint site – show the solar
wind might be largely energized and fueled by individual jetlets that are
intermittently erupting into the lower part of the corona. Though each jetlet
is relatively small – just a few hundred miles long – their collective energy
and mass could be enough to create the solar wind.
“This result implies that essentially all of the solar wind is likely
released intermittently, becoming a steady flow in much the same way that the
individual clapping sounds in an auditorium become a steady roar as an audience
applauds,” said Craig DeForest, a solar physicist at the Southwest Research
Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and coauthor on the new paper. “This changes
the paradigm for how we think about certain aspects of the solar wind.”
Jetlets, which were first observed over a decade ago, are known to be
caused by a process known as magnetic reconnection, which occurs as magnetic
field lines become tangled and explosively realign. Reconnection is a common
process in charged gases called plasmas and is found across the universe from
the Sun to near-Earth space to around black holes. In the solar corona,
reconnection creates these short-lived jets of plasma that pass energy and
material into the upper corona, which escape across the solar system as the
solar wind.
To study the jetlets and magnetic fields, scientists primarily used
observations from the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) and the Geostationary
Operational Environmental Satellite-R Series’ Solar Ultraviolet Imager (GOES-R/SUVI)
instrument, as well as high-resolution magnetic field data from the Goode Solar
Telescope at the Big Bear Solar Observatory in California. The
whole study was driven by a phenomenon first observed by Parker Solar Probe
called switchbacks – magnetic zig-zag structures in the solar wind. The
combination of observations from many viewpoints, along with the high
resolution of those views and Parker Solar Probe’s up-close observations,
helped the scientists understand the collective behavior of the jetlets.
“Previously, we could not detect enough such events to explain the observed
amount of mass and energy streaming from the Sun,” said Judy Karpen, coauthor
on the paper and heliophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland. “But the improved resolution of the observations and
meticulous data processing enabled the new findings.”
The observations showed that jetlets are present in the lower solar atmosphere across the entire Sun. This makes them a tenable driver for the constant solar wind, as opposed to other phenomena that wax and wane with the 11-year cycle of solar activity, such as solar flares and coronal mass ejections. Furthermore, the scientists calculated that the energy and mass produced by the jetlets could provide most, if not all, of the amount of energy and mass seen in the solar wind.
NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory shows small-scale jetlets at the base of the solar corona, or the Sun’s upper atmosphere. Jetlets can be seen emanating from the surface of the Sun. The observations were made over the course of approximately 10 hours on April 28, 2021. Credits: NASA/SDO
A Breakthrough Decades in the Making
The solar wind was first proposed in the late 1950s by the visionary
scientist Eugene Parker, namesake of the Parker Solar Probe. In 1988, Parker
proposed the corona could be heated by “nanoflares,” tiny explosions on the
solar atmosphere. Parker's theory eventually became a leading candidate to
explain the heating and acceleration of the solar wind.
“The tiny reconnection events we observed are, in a way, what Eugene Parker
proposed over three decades ago,” Raouafi said. “I am convinced that we
are on the right path toward understanding the solar wind and coronal heating.”
Continued observations from Parker Solar Probe and other instruments such
as NASA’s Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere, or PUNCH, and the
Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, will help scientists confirm whether jetlets
are the main source of solar wind.
“The findings make it much easier to explain how the solar wind is
accelerated and heated,” DeForest said. “We’re not finished with the puzzle
yet, but this is a major step forward for understanding a central mystery of
solar physics.”
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. The Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory designed, built, manages, and operates the spacecraft.
By Mara Johnson-Groh NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA Missions Find ‘Jetlets’ Could Power the Solar Wind | NASA
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