• 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

Parker Solar Probe Finds The Source Of Fast Solar Wind Flurries

June 7, 2023 by Deborah Bloomfield

By venturing closer to the Sun than any spacecraft before it, the Parker Solar Probe has identified the regions responsible for streams of highly energetic particles traveling orders of magnitude faster than the rest of the solar wind. The finding may improve our predictions of solar activity, allowing operators to shut down endangered grids and satellites to take evasive action.

The Sun is not just a seething ball of plasma. It’s also magnetically charged, and twisting magnetic field lines constantly change its behavior near the surface, particularly now as the solar cycle rises. 

Advertisement

One of the consequences of all this activity is patches of fast solar wind, whose particles race out of coronal holes at speeds of around 750 kilometers per second (1,700,000 miles per hour), around double the ordinary solar wind. A new study reports Parker has got close enough to observe the microstructure within these holes, revealing the forces responsible.

“Winds carry lots of information from the sun to Earth, so understanding the mechanism behind the sun’s wind is important for practical reasons on Earth,” said Dr James Drake of the University of Maryland-College Park in a statement. 

The fast winds come rushing out of coronal holes, gaps in the Sun’s atmosphere where magnetic fields point outwards from the Sun that can be 30,000 kilometers (18,000 miles) wide. Within these holes are convection cells, like those seen in a boiling pot of water. At certain points these cells meet and drag the Sun’s magnetic field down from the surface creating a funnel.

The funnels intensify the magnetic field to such an extent that high energy particles are expelled with 10-100 times the energy of the slow solar wind. Parker has allowed us to resolve these funnels in a way we haven’t from Earth. 

Advertisement

The fast wind initially streams away from the cells in isolated jets, but turbulence mixes it with the slower surrounding winds long before it reaches Earth, making its structure hard to determine.

Before Parker was launched there were two theories about the source of these high-energy particles. According to one the particles were accelerated by the reconnection of magnetic fields; the other attributed their speed to Alfvén waves of hot plasma. The probe was launched in part to settle this question, and the paper’s authors think that’s now been done.

“Our results, we think, are strong evidence that it’s reconnection that’s doing that,” said Professor Stuart Bale of the University of California, Berkeley.

The Alfvén waves are real, but the authors conclude they are a consequence of the magnetic reconnections rather than a competing driver of fast particles. Bale noted a similar process is seen in the Earth’s magnetotail, the part of the magnetosphere opposite the Sun.

Advertisement

Although Earth-based telescopes haven’t been able to resolve the magnetic funnels, they have detected jetlets within the holes that the authors think correspond to funnel locations.

Coronal holes exist throughout the Sun’s cycle, but during minima they retreat to the poles, pointing the fast solar winds away from the Earth. As the solar cycle builds, their locations expand.

The observations were made by Parker at just 8.3 million kilometers (5.2 million miles) from the Sun (12 solar radii). It’s mission will eventually take it to a distance of 6.4 million kilometers (almost 4 million miles), which is as close as NASA thinks it can get without destroying its instruments. The closest approach looks set to coincide with the coming solar maximum, when the Sun may be so active everything will be too chaotic to observe the causes. Then again, if Parker can, the knowledge reward will be spectacular.

“There was some consternation at the beginning of the solar probe mission that we’re going to launch this thing right into the quietest, most dull part of the solar cycle,” Bale said. “But I think without that, we would never have understood this. It would have been just too messy. I think we’re lucky that we launched it in the solar minimum.”

Advertisement

The study is published in Nature.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Take Five: Big in Japan
  2. Struggle over Egypt’s Juhayna behind arrest of founder, son – Amnesty
  3. Exclusive-Northvolt plots EV battery grab with $750 million Swedish lab plan
  4. New Record Set With 17 People In Earth Orbit At The Same Time

Source Link: Parker Solar Probe Finds The Source Of Fast Solar Wind Flurries

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • The Only Known (Nearly) Complete Green Mummy Just Revealed Why It’s So Green
  • What Happened To The Vasa? Arguably The Least Successful Ship In History
  • Decorating Your Home With Seasonal Plants? They Could Be A Holiday Hazard For Pets
  • The 9th Dedekind Number: Why It Took 32 Years To Find, And Why We May Never See A 10th
  • Alaska Saw More Wildfires In The Last Century Than In The Previous 3,000 Years
  • If Bird Flu Spills Over To Humans,This Is What Would Happen In A Very Short Period
  • This Unusual Plant Might Be One Of Evolution’s “Weirdest Experiments”
  • In 1940, A Dog Investigated A Hole In A Tree And Discovered A Vast Cave Filled With Ancient Human Artwork
  • “Time Is Not Broken”: US Officials Work To Correct Time, After Discovering It Is 4.8 Microseconds Out
  • The Evolutionary Reason Why Rage Bait Affects Us – And How To Deal With It This Holiday Season
  • Whales Living To 200 May Actually Be The Norm – There’s A Sad Reason Why We Don’t Know Yet
  • IFLScience The Big Questions: Can Magic Be Used As A Tool In Science?
  • Sheep And… Rhinos? There’s A Very Cute Reason You See Them Hanging Out Together
  • Why Does The Latest Sunrise Of The Year Not Fall On The Winter Solstice?
  • Real Or Fake Christmas Trees: Which Is Better For The Environment?
  • “Cosmic Dipole Anomaly” Suggests That Our Universe May Be “Lopsided”, Seriously Challenging Our Understanding Of The Cosmos
  • Which Animals Mate For Life?
  • Why Is Rainbow Mountain So Vibrantly Colorful?
  • “It’s An Incredible Feeling”: Salty Air Bubbles In 1.4-Billion-Year-Old Crystals Reveal Secrets Of Earth’s Early Atmosphere
  • These Were Some Of The Most Significant Scientific Experiments Of 2025
  • 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