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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Explaining the long solar minimum
Wednesday, 06 April 2011 11:47
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| Solar system - The Sun |
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Sunspots have been observed for about four centuries, since they were first reported by Galileo. Appearing in roughly eleven-year cycles of activity, sunspots are regions of strong and complex magnetic fields which are also home to large releases of energy and furious solar storms. These storms modulate winds of energetic charged particles that cause significant disruption to communications and power grids when they reach the Earth. Furthermore, the eruption and decay of sunspots and their associated magnetic fields modulate solar irradiance and extra-galactic cosmic rays, quantities that also affect the Earth's climate. Modeling sunspots and their influences are important goals of solar astrophysics, and today, four hundred years after their discovery, there has been significant progress. The number of sunspots at any given time changes during a cycle. The minimum in the last one, numbered Cycle 23, was striking, however: the sun entered the quietest period it has had in 100 years, spending almost two years (2008-2010) devoid of sunspots. In a paper in the recent issue of the journal Nature, CfA astronomers Andres Munoz-Jaramillo, Petrus Martens, and a colleague explain the unusual extended minimum of Cycle 23 in terms of the surface flow of hot material from the sun's equator towards its poles (and its counter-flow deep inside the sun). They find that a more sophisticated accounting of these flows of material can explain the main characteristics of this extended minimum. In particular, they argue that a faster flow at the beginning of the Cycle, which slows down after the Cycle's peak, diminished the magnetic field strength at the poles and increased the number of days without sunspots. The new results are a significant advance in our understanding of a dramatic phenomenon that has been well-known but mysterious since the time of Galileo. |




The recent sunspot minimum period was longer than normal. A new paper in Nature links the prolonged minimum to the surface flowson the Sun