Friday, April 17, 2026

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Finds Surprises in an Explosion Near the Sun - The Latest in NASA Science News

Before a solar storm races across space and impacts technology on Earth, it starts with an explosive process on the Sun known as magnetic reconnection. Now, observations from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe have uncovered new details about how these types of magnetic events fling particles to dangerous speeds.

On a 2022 solar flyby, Parker Solar Probe passed in between the Sun and the site of a magnetic reconnection event in the solar wind, the continual stream of particles and magnetic fields emitted by the Sun. Since the storm-causing reconnection events happen in the hard-to-access solar atmosphere, events occurring in the solar wind offer an opportunity to take direct measurements of particles accelerated by magnetic reconnection. And Parker Solar Probe did just that.

Magnetic reconnection is one of the most important processes in space. Reconnection occurs when crossed magnetic field lines snap, explosively flinging away nearby particles at high speeds. This animation illustrates this magnetic explosion on the Sun, where it can create solar storms and send particles racing across the solar system.

NASA’s Conceptual Image Laboratory

Parker Solar Probe observed a Sun-directed jet of particles made of protons and heavy ions — elements with extra electrons. But unexpectedly, analysis of the data revealed that protons and ions were accelerated in different manners. Magnetic reconnection theories expect these two types of particles to be accelerated in the same manner, but the new observations showed the protons formed a dispersed beam, like that from a flashlight, while the heavier ions were directed in a straight line like a laser beam.

The findings, published March 31 in the Astrophysical Journal, will help scientists refine theoretical models of magnetic reconnection to better understand how solar storms are powered.

By Mara Johnson-Groh
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
 

Source: NASA's Parker Solar Probe Finds Explosive Surprises on Sun

Computational 'time machine' shows solar and wind power on track for 2°C target, but not for 1.5°C - Energy & Green Tech

Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain 

Wind and solar power have grown faster than almost anyone predicted, but projecting their future expansion remains surprisingly difficult. Researchers at Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, have developed what they call a computational "time machine"—a model that outperforms existing projection methods by using AI techniques to analyze historical growth patterns across countries. Their central projection shows that onshore wind is likely to supply around 25% of global electricity by 2050, with solar reaching about 20%. This is consistent with the 2°C target, but falls short of what is required for 1.5°C. The work appears in Nature Energy.

Predicting the future is particularly challenging for technologies like wind and solar, where rapid cost declines are offset by growing barriers such as public opposition, infrastructure constraints and policy shifts.

"Existing models are very good at identifying what needs to happen to reach climate targets, but they can't tell us which developments are most likely. That's the gap we wanted to fill," says Jessica Jewell, Professor at Chalmers University of Technology.

Across more than 200 countries, the researchers identified a recurring pattern in how wind and solar power grow: long periods of relatively steady expansion punctuated by sudden growth spurts often triggered by policy shifts.

"Most models assume a smooth S-shaped growth curve, but that's not how it actually looks in the real world. Growth often comes in bursts, and if you ignore that, you can misjudge how fast technologies will expand," says Avi Jakhmola, Ph.D. Student at Chalmers University of Technology and first author of the paper.

13,000 virtual worlds for the future

So, with the goal of improving the predictions, Jakhmola created a model built on 13,000 virtual worlds. In each of these worlds, solar and wind power develop in different ways—from the fastest possible expansion to the slowest—and everything in between. A machine learning algorithm was then trained on all these worlds to learn to predict global outcomes from early national trends.

"When we apply the model to real-world data, it can tell us what is the most probable outcome for the future—given what we have seen so far and given all the virtual worlds it has seen," says Jakhmola.

By 2050, the model projects onshore wind reaching around 26% of global electricity (central range: 20–34%), and solar around 21% (15–29%). This broadly aligns with 2°C-compatible pathways but falls short of what's needed for 1.5°C.

The projections also put the COP28 pledge to triple renewables capacity by 2030 in perspective. The pledge falls near the 95th percentile, meaning that it would require growth rates rarely observed.

"The tripling of the renewables pledge is not impossible, but it would require everything to go extremely well in all countries," says Jewell.

The researchers also tested what would actually be required for us to reach the 1.5°C goal.

"If we start now, the required growth rates are demanding but not unprecedented, comparable to what the EU targets for wind with REPowerEU and what India has planned for solar power," says Jakhmola. "But if we delay until 2030, the acceleration needed becomes much steeper and much more abrupt. The window for ramping up closes quickly."

Going back in time to ensure the model's reliability

The researchers also used the model to test the reliability of its projections—by going back in time.

"We wanted to know if our projections will hold up ten or twenty years from now. When we fed the model only data from 2015, we found that it correctly predicts what has happened since then. This is what we mean by a computational time machine, and it gives us real confidence in the projections going forward," says Jakhmola.

The study points toward a broader ambition to develop scientifically-rigorous methods for projecting the most likely growth paths for other low-carbon technologies, not just wind and solar.

Jewell says, "It's long been a joke how bad technology forecasts are. But if you're a decision maker, trying to figure out how hard to push for change, you need a realistic baseline. Our study is the first step towards developing such a realistic view of the future." 

Provided by Chalmers University of Technology  

Source: Computational 'time machine' shows solar and wind power on track for 2°C target, but not for 1.5°C