• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Mesmerizing Cosmic Dust Rainbow Caught By NASA’s PUNCH Mission

May 17, 2025 by Deborah Bloomfield

Where does the Sun end and the Solar System begin? The answer is not clear-cut. The Sun’s atmosphere – the corona – extends far into space, and its processes shape the solar wind that streams in interplanetary space, affecting planets, moons, and more. To better study these interactions, NASA launched a mission made up of four spacecraft, and now, some of their glorious first images are here.

The mission has a Narrow Field Imager (NFI) and three Wide Field Imagers (WFIs). The NFI snaps pictures of the corona around the Sun using an occulter, which blocks the light of the Sun. This approach is useful as long as you don’t want to see too close to the Sun, because as you can see in the picture below, sunlight will diffract on it, creating those beautiful rings of stray light.

During commissioning, PUNCH’s NFI instrument captured this image of the new Moon as it passed by the Sun in the sky on April 27, 2025. The new Moon appears full, because it is illuminated by Earthshine (sunlight reflected off Earth). The image helped the PUNCH team confirm that the Moon will not obscure NFI’s view of the corona and solar wind. The dark circle near the bottom is the shadow of NFI’s occulter, which hides the Sun. The occulter, which was not yet fully aligned with the Sun, is surrounded by a narrow bright ring of diffracted light. Around that is a large, hazy circle of stray light glinting off the occulter (the Moon is inside that circle). Outside that is a small, dimmer region of the sky that is less affected by glint.

NFI image of the solar corona with the Moon.

Image credit: NASA/SwRI

Other missions are happening to see closer to the Sun; there’s Proba-3 from the European Space Agency, where two spacecraft align so that the one in front can be the occulter, delivering an eclipse on demand. But truly, solar eclipses are the best for it – so you either wait to have one or you plan a mission that can deliver them monthly by following the Moon in special orbits.

And talking about the Moon, it is a bit odd to see it so clear in the above photo. That picture was taken during the new Moon phase, where the near side, the side we see, is experiencing night. The reason why we can see it is due to Earthshine, sunlight reflected by our planet and illuminating the Moon’s shadowed surface.

The WFIs are instead looking away from the Sun and into the plane of the Solar System, providing the second side of the understanding sought by this two-year mission. What they are looking at is the zodiacal light. This is created by dust that is spread around the Solar System, though mostly across its plane, catching sunlight. Interestingly, zodiacal light was also the research topic of Dr Brian May’s thesis; he took a 36-year-long break before completing it because he became somewhat busy with his band, Queen.

The instrument’s wide field of view reveals the glow of zodiacal light stretching up and to the right. The V shape of the Hyades star cluster appears near the top, with the more compact Pleiades star cluster to the lower right.

The zodiacal light appears like a false dawn, creating the illusion of the sunrise. It is just sunlight bouncing off dust.

Image credit: NASA/SwRI

The different instruments are studying the zodiacal light in slightly different ways to build a 3D picture of interplanetary space to work out how the coronal structures turn into the solar wind, as well as how explosive events such as coronal mass ejections then propagate through interplanetary space. The prettiest of all pictures is, of course, the rainbow one from WFI-2.

The colors are not real but are placed on it for scientific reasons. The colors are related to the polarization of light, the angle at which the light waves oscillate. The hue of the color is used to indicate direction, while the saturation is the intensity.  “A pastel green feature would be slightly polarized in the horizontal direction, while a deep blue feature would be strongly polarized in a diagonal direction,” NASA explained in a statement.

The mission will be very important to understanding the Sun and its impact, and it adds to the array of new spacecraft and telescopes that can now observe our star like never before.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Russia moves Sukhoi Su-30 fighter jets to Belarus to patrol borders, Minsk says
  2. French senators to visit Taiwan amid soaring China tensions
  3. Thought Unicorns Don’t Exist? Turns Out They Live In A Chinese Cave
  4. Alaska’s Rusting Rivers Are Turning Orange And As Acidic As Vinegar

Source Link: Mesmerizing Cosmic Dust Rainbow Caught By NASA's PUNCH Mission

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • This Is The Only Known Ankylosaur Hatchling Fossil In The World
  • The World’s Biggest Frog Is A 3.3-Kilogram, Nest-Building Whopper With No Croak To Be Found
  • Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Has Slightly Changed Course And May Have Lost A Lot Of Mass, NASA Observations Show
  • “Behold The GARLIATH!”: Enormous “Living Fossil” Hauled From Mississippi Floodplains Stuns Scientists
  • We Finally Know How Life Exists In One Of The Most Inhospitable Places On Earth
  • World’s Largest Spider Web, Created By 111,000 Arachnids In A Cave, Is Big Enough To Catch A Whale
  • What Is A Horse Chestnut? A Crusty Remnant Of Evolution (That People Like To Feed Their Dogs)
  • First Evidence Of High “Forever Chemicals” In Urban Wild Mammals Reveals Australian Possums Contaminated With PFAS
  • Why Don’t You Have A Tail?
  • What Happens If Someone Actually Finds The Loch Ness Monster?
  • Golden Comet C/2025 K1 (ATLAS) Is A Chemical Rarity – And It Should Have Been Destroyed!
  • Bat Species Not Seen In 55 Years Rediscovered And Filmed For First Time – Just Look At Those Ears
  • At Last, We May Finally Have A Way To Tell Female Dinosaurs From Males
  • Giraffes In North American Zoos Have Been Hybridizing – And That’s A Problem
  • Watch: Cosmic Fireworks As Comet Fragment Traveling Over 80,000 Kilometers Per Hour Explodes In The Air
  • Why Don’t Birds Die When They Sit On 400,000-Volt Power Lines?
  • On November 13, 2026, Voyager Will Reach One Full Light-Day Away From Earth
  • Why Don’t We Ride Zebras?
  • Interstellar Object 3I/ATLAS Changed Color Again, And Shows Signs Of Non-Gravitational Acceleration
  • Record-Breaking Brightest Black Hole Flare Shines With The Light Of 10 Trillion Suns
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version