International Consortium With Brazilian Participation Studies Physics of Solar Flares
Hello reader!
It
follows an article published on day (09/09) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that International Consortium with brazilian participation
studies physics of Solar Flares.
Duda Falcão
NEWS
Consortium
Studies Physics of Solar Flares
By Elton Alisson
September 09, 2015
(Image: NASA)
Postdoctoral
researcher at the University of Glasgow in Scotland
and former FAPESP
scholarship holder is Brazil's only representative
in a research consortium
comprising seven European institutions.
|
Agência FAPESP – A consortium of seven European universities
and research institutions has spent the past two years studying the physics of
solar flares, considered the most intense energy bursts in the solar system.
The project is called F-CHROMA, short
for Flare Chromospheres: Observations, Models and Archives. It is funded by the
European Commission under the EU’s Seventh Framework Program (FP7) for research
and technological development.
The only Brazilian involved is Paulo Simões, a
postdoctoral researcher at the University of Glasgow’s School of Physics &
Astronomy in Scotland.
Simões received scholarships from FAPESP for scientific initiation and postdoctoral research at
Mackenzie Presbyterian University (UPM) in São Paulo, Brazil, as well as masters and PhD research
at the National Space Research Institute (INPE).
Simões was invited by UPM’s Radio Astronomy &
Astrophysics Center (CRAAM) to take part in a colloquium held in São Paulo in
early August to discuss solar flares in the chromosphere.
“The main aim of the F-CHROMA project is to increase
knowledge about the physics of solar flares by comparing current theories and
models with observations at very high resolutions,” Simões told Agência FAPESP.
Solar flares are sudden eruptions on the sun’s surface
characterized by the release of huge amounts of radiation. They may be caused
by localized changes in the sun’s electromagnetic field. These events influence
space weather and may disrupt human activities, including data transmission by
satellites, for example.
Within a few minutes, a mid-sized solar flare can
release an amount of energy equivalent to 100 million megatons of TNT, which is
10,000 times the energy stored in the world’s entire stockpile of nuclear
weapons. Most of this energy is ultimately converted into electromagnetic
radiation emitted mainly in the chromosphere. A thin, low-density layer of the
sun’s atmosphere, the chromosphere, is located above the photosphere, the sun’s
innermost layer, and below the corona, its outermost layer. Scientists now
believe most of the electromagnetic radiation emitted by the sun dissipates in
the chromosphere.
“Current theory suggests that electrons are
accelerated in some part of the corona and cross the sun’s magnetic field to
the chromosphere,” Simões said.
“On arrival in the chromosphere, the electrons collide
with other particles that are already there, such as protons and other
electrons, and deposit energy, altering the conditions in the chromosphere.”
The researchers’ goal is to understand how the
chromosphere responds to this inrush of energy during a solar flare, in terms
of changes in temperature and density, as well as ionization of elements such
as hydrogen and helium.
“We’re interested in deepening our grasp of how solar
flares begin and how they evolve. We also want to know what happens in the
chromosphere as energy builds up and electromagnetic radiation rushes out,”
Simões said.
“Last but not least, we aim to increase our knowledge
of how solar flare energy is stored, released and converted into other forms.”
According to Simões, as with 99% of the visible
universe, the sun’s atmosphere is made up of plasma (electrified gas), whose
electrically charged ions and electrons produce a magnetic field.
By studying the release of energy and radiation in
solar flares, he explained, researchers can achieve a better understanding of
astrophysical plasma and the high-energy processes associated with various
astrophysical objects, such as quasars.
“The sun is a plasma laboratory. By studying the sun,
we can find out more about how this plasma and the sun’s magnetic field behave
and how energy is transferred from one region to another, among many other
matters,” Simões said.
Knowledge of the sun’s activity can also be applied to
study other astronomical objects, such as stars, and can contribute to the
search for habitable exoplanets (planets orbiting stars in other solar
systems).
Flares are also observed on other stars, with more
intensity than the flares seen on our own sun, but according to Simões
scientists do not yet know why they occur.
“Most aspects of the physics of solar flares can be
used to study other astronomical objects,” he said.
First Results
To study solar flares, the researchers who are
participating in F-CHROMA combine data from satellite and ground-based
observations with theoretical and advanced computational modeling.
Some of the ground-based solar observation is
performed using optical telescopes, such as the Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) in
New Mexico (USA) and the Swedish 1-meter Solar Telescope (SST) in the Canary
Islands (Spain).
Space observation is performed using unmanned
probes, such as the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), launched in early
2010, and the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), launched in June
2013. Both are missions of the US National Aeronautics & Space
Administration (NASA).
Using data collected by the Atmospheric Imaging
Assembly (AIA), an instrument on board the SDO that continuously observes the
sun’s corona and the ultraviolet region of the chromosphere, and by the Reuven
Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (RHESSI), another NASA mission,
Simões and other researchers involved in F-CHROMA observed that at the onset of
a solar flare the plasma in a region between the lower corona and the top of
the chromosphere rises to very high temperatures, ranging between 6 and 12
million degrees.
“This had already been hypothesized by researchers in
the early 1990s, but the observational data was insufficient to prove it,”
Simões said. “We’ve now shown that the plasma in this region does indeed become
extremely hot at the start of a solar flare.”
Findings from F-CHROMA will be used in the future to
develop major solar observation projects, such as Hawaii’s Daniel K. Inouye
Solar Telescope, expected to see first light in 2019, and the European Space
Agency’s Solar Orbiter, scheduled for launching in 2018 and set to be one of
the first probes to reach the vicinity of the sun.
The article “Impulsive heating of solar
flare ribbons above 10 MK” (doi: 10.1007/s11207-015-0709-9) by
Simões et al. can be read in the journal Solar Physics at link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11207-015-0709-9#.
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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