Washington, Aug 3:
Scientists have found some of the strongest evidence to
date to explain what makes the Sun’s outer atmosphere so much hotter
than its surface.
Researchers said that nanoflares - a
constant peppering of impulsive bursts of heating, none of which can be
individually detected - provide the mysterious extra heat.
The
new observations come from just six minutes worth of data from one of
NASA’s least expensive type of missions, a sounding rocket, researchers
said.
The Sun’s visible surface, called the
photosphere, is some 6,000 Kelvins, while the corona regularly reaches
temperatures which are 300 times as hot.
Several
theories have been offered for how the magnetic energy coursing through
the corona is converted into the heat that raises the temperature.
The
EUNIS rocket, short for Extreme Ultraviolet Normal Incidence
Spectrograph, however, was equipped with a very sensitive version of an
instrument called a spectrograph.
Spectrographs
gather information about how much material is present at a given
temperature, by recording different wavelengths of light.
EUNIS
flew up nearly 321 km above the ground aboard a sounding rocket, a type
of NASA mission that flies for only 15 minutes or so, and gathered
about six minutes worth of observations from above the planet’s air.
During
its flight, EUNIS scanned a pre-determined region on the Sun known to
be magnetically complex, a so-called active region, which can often be
the source of larger flares and coronal mass ejections.
As light from the region streamed into its spectrograph, the instrument separated the light into its various wavelengths.
Instead
of producing a typical image of the Sun, the wavelengths with larger
amounts of light are each represented by a vertical line called an
emission line.
Each emission line, in turn,
represents material at a unique temperature on the Sun. Further analysis
can identify the density and movement of the material as well.
The
EUNIS spectrograph was tuned into a range of wavelengths useful for
spotting material at temperatures of 10 million Kelvin - temperatures
that are a signature of nanoflares.
Scientists have
hypothesised that a myriad of nanoflares could heat up solar material in
the atmosphere to temperatures of up to 10 million Kelvins.
This
material would cool very rapidly, producing ample solar material at the
1 to 3 million degrees regularly seen in the corona. However, the faint
presence of that extremely hot material should remain.
Looking
over their six minutes of data, the EUNIS team spotted a wavelength of
light corresponding to that 10 million degree material.
Y
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