News on the Sun
- The Sun has shifted ppolarity
- Huge tornadoes discovered on the Sun
- The Sun got bigger
- Last solar minimum was unusual
- The sound of a solar storm
- Earth’s magnetic field provides vital protection
- The Sun's magnetosphere
- IBEX detects "alien" particles
- Cold Hydrogen gasses recycles sunspots
- Thin layers of cosmic chok-waves
- The Solar cycles
- Comet hits the Sun
- Solar eruption causes massive Aurora's
- Our Solarsystem had a fifth Gas-giant planet
- 6 Coronal Mass Ejections in 24hours!
- New Characteristics of Solar flares discovered
- 40 year old Mariner 5 solar wind problem solved
- Solar wind traced in 3D from Sun to Earth
- Detection of emerging sunspot regions
- SDO Spots Extra Energy in the Sun's Corona
- New images of Vesta from DAWN
- New way to measure magnetism around the Sun
- Solar eruption "blew half the sun to pieces"
- Sun and planets constructed differently
- Solar storm reaches Earth today
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Detection of emerging sunspot regions
Friday, 19 August 2011 20:14
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| Solar system - The Sun |
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The first clear detection of emerging sunspot regions prior to any indication of the region in magnetograms was published in Science on 19 August 2011.
Sunspots, dark features in the solar photosphere with strong magnetic field, have been observed for more than 400 years. They are the most visible components of regions where solar flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs) occur, and these eruptive events may cause power outages and interruptions of telecommunication and navigation services on the Earth. Although it is widely believed that sunspot regions are generated in the deep solar interior, the detection of these regions before they emerge from the convection zone into the photosphere has remained undetected until now.
Stanford scientists report today the detection of several sunspot regions in the deep interior of the Sun, 1-2 days before they appear on the solar disc. Their results show that sunspots are generated at least 60,000 km below the surface and emerge from this depth up to the surface with an average speed of 0,3-0,6 km/s. The detection of sunspots in the solar interior may provide useful warnings about upcoming surface magnetic activity which can be used to improve and extend the predictions of space weather forecast. The technique that they used to detect the sunspots is called time-distance helioseismology , and it is similar to a technique used by seismologists to image the Earth's interior. Source: www.sciencemag.org |




