Brazilian University Study Detects Start and Wave Propagation Generated by Eject Solar Matter
Hello
reader!
It
follows an article published on day (25/11) in the english website of the Agência
FAPESP noting that Brazilian University Study detects start and
wave propagation generated
by Eject Solar
Matter.
Duda
Falcão
NEWS
Onset
and Propagation of Shock Waves
Created by Ejections of Solar Matter
By José Tadeu Arantes
November 25, 2015
(Image:
researchers' archive)
Wave propagating from coronal mass ejection detected
in
the extreme ultraviolet frequency band.
|
Agência
FAPESP –
The structure and complex dynamics of the Sun’s atmosphere are relatively well
known. However, many aspects have not yet been completely established,
requiring new research. One such aspect is the ejection of solar matter into
interplanetary space. This phenomenon concerns mankind directly because
part of the ejected matter can fall to Earth and interfere with terrestrial
processes, especially telecommunications.
A
study by researchers at Paraíba Valley University (UNIVAP) in Brazil
investigated the relationship between coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and the
production of shock waves that propagate through the Sun’s atmosphere.
A
paper describing their findings was published in
the journal Astronomy & Astrophysics by Rafael Douglas Cunha da
Silva, Francisco Carlos Rocha Fernandes and Caius Lucius Selhorst. The study
arose from Cunha da Silva’s PhD thesis, which was supervised by Fernandes and
Selhorst and supported by FAPESP.
“CMEs
produce shock waves that propagate through the solar atmosphere at between 200
and 2,000 kilometers per second,” Fernandes told Agência FAPESP. “The
atmospheric disturbances triggered by these shock waves generate
electromagnetic emissions in several different frequency bands. These emissions
are the shock waves’ signatures, as it were. Our study set out to correlate two
different types of electromagnetic emission – radio bursts and extreme
ultraviolet waves.”
Fernandes
is the head of UNIVAP’s PhD course in physics and astronomy and principal
investigator for the Thematic Project entitled “Development of Brazilian
Decimetric Array (Phase II)”, supported by FAPESP.
“We
set out to determine the heights in the solar atmosphere at which shock waves
are produced and how they propagate,” Selhorst said. “The solar atmosphere’s
density declines with height, and emission frequency depends on local plasma
density. So, by measuring frequency, you can calculate density and, by
extension, height.”
Selhorst
is a professor at UNIVAP and a principal investigator in another research
project supported by FAPESP: “Study of the changes in the
solar magnetic field based on radio observations”.
CMEs
release huge amounts of hot matter into interplanetary space; this matter is
mainly composed of electrons and protons but also contains a small percentage
of ions from heavier elements, such as helium, oxygen and even iron. This
material, together with the solar wind, propagates to the extreme outer bounds
of the heliosphere, far beyond Pluto’s orbit and approximately 100 times the
distance between the Earth and the Sun.
Magnetic
Field Rearrangement
CMEs
appear to be associated with sudden releases of energy deriving from magnetic
field rearrangements in the solar atmosphere. “They’re recurring phenomena,”
Selhorst said. “During periods of maximum solar activity, they happen two or
three times a day on average. During periods of low activity, they happen once
a week.”
Electromagnetic
emissions in the form of radio bursts are not produced directly by CMEs but
rather by the shock waves they generate as they hurtle through the Sun’s
atmosphere. “These shock waves can be detected by satellites in the ultraviolet
band. What we found in our study was a significant temporal correlation between
shock wave expansion detected in the extreme ultraviolet band and radio
bursts,” Cunha da Silva said.
This
association is important because shock wave production and propagation cannot
be observed accurately in ultraviolet alone: the equipment used for this
purpose, such as the twin satellites of NASA's Solar TErrestrial RElations
Observatory (STEREO), has a time resolution on the order of five minutes,
compared with milliseconds for radio data.
“The
new generation of satellite instruments has greatly improved the temporal
resolution for detection in the extreme ultraviolet spectrum. The AIA
(Atmospheric Imaging Assembly) on board the SDO (Solar Dynamics Observatory)
satellite, which was launched in 2010, captures images of the entire Sun every
12 seconds. This greatly facilitates event identification, but there remains
the problem that the images are two-dimensional projections of three-dimensional
events,” Selhorst said.
“This
is why the use of radio spectra is still one of the main methods used for
indirect observation of the formation of coronal shock waves, especially those
produced by CMEs in their initial burst. Analysis of these spectra enables us
to estimate the altitude range in the solar atmosphere at which radio emissions
occur, as well as the direction of the source, which may be radial or oblique.”
Transition
Region
Most
CMEs originate relatively close to the Sun’s “surface”, as it were – in fact,
what we call the “surface” of the Sun is a region in which visible light
becomes opaque, so that the star’s internal structure cannot be observed. Above
this opaque region is the atmosphere proper, with three distinct layers called the
photosphere, chromosphere and corona. Between the latter two is a narrow
transition region in which plasma temperature and density change drastically.
The
corona is so rarefied that it cannot be observed with the naked eye except
during a total eclipse of the Sun. To study the phenomena that occur in the
corona, scientists use a coronagraph to simulate an eclipse. A solar
coronagraph is a telescopic attachment that blocks light from the lower layers
of the Sun’s atmosphere to reveal the faint corona.
“When
we study the Sun using a more conventional instrument such as a coronagraph, we
can’t detect the point at which shock waves are created because the coronagraph
hides part of the Sun’s atmosphere as well as the solar disk itself. In the
case of extreme ultraviolet and radio, this obstruction doesn’t happen, so we
can observe the onset of shock wave propagation in regions very close to the
surface,” Selhorst said.
(Researchers'
archive)
Animation
showing coronal mass ejection
with Sun’s disk covered by coronagraph.
|
Source: English
WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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