News on the Sun
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- The Sun got bigger
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- 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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Tracking the origins of speedy solar particles
Wednesday, 02 February 2011 14:04
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| Solar system - The Sun |
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NASA's THEMIS spacecraft combined with computer models have helped track the origin of the energetic particles in Earth's magnetic atmosphere that appear during a kind of space weather called a substorm.
Understanding the source of such particles and how they are shuttled through Earth's atmosphere is crucial to better understanding the Sun's complex space weather system and thus protect satellites or even humans in space. "The origin of fast electrons in substorms has been a puzzle," says Maha Ashour-Abdalla, the lead author of a Nature Physics paper that appeared online on January 30, 2011 on the subject and a physicist at the University of California"It hasn't been clear until now if they got their burst of speed in the middle of the storm, or from some place further away." Substorms originate opposite the sun on Earth's "night side," at a point about a third of the distance to the moon. At this point in space, energy and particles from the solar wind store up over time. This is also a point where the more orderly field lines near Earth -- where they look like two giant ears on either side of the globe, a shape known as a dipole since the lines bow down to touch Earth at the two poles – can distort into long lines and sometimes pull apart and "reconnect." During reconnection, the stored energy is released in explosions that send particles out in all directions. But reconnection is a magnetic phenomenon and scientists don't know the exact mechanism that creates speeding particles from that phenomenon. "For thirty years, one of the questions about the magnetic environment around Earth has been, 'how do magnetic fields give rise to moving, energetic particles?'" says NASA scientist Melvyn Goldstein, chief of the Geospace Physics Laboratory at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., and another author on the paper. "We need to know such things to help plan the next generation of reconnection research instruments such as the Magnetospheric MultiScale mission (MMS) due to launch in 2014. MMS needs to look in the right place and for the correct signatures of particle energization." In the early 1980s, scientists hypothesized that the quick, high-energy particles might get their speed from rapidly changing magnetic fields. Changing magnetic fields can cause electrons to zoom along a corkscrew path by the betatron effect. Indeed, electrons moving toward Earth from a substorm will naturally cross a host of changing magnetic fields as those long, stretched field lines far away from Earth relax back to the more familiar dipole field lines closer to Earth, a process called dipolarization. Betatron acceleration causes the particles to gain energy and speed much farther away from the initial reconnection site. But in the absence of observations that could simultaneously measure data near the reconnection site and closer to Earth, the hypothesis was hard to prove or contradict. THEMIS, however, was specifically designed to study the formation of substorms. It launched with five spacecraft, which can be spread out over some 70.000km - a perfect tool for examining different areas of Earth's magnetic environment at the same time. Near midnight, on February 15, 2008, three of the satellites moving through Earth's magnetic tail, about 58.000km from Earth, traveled through a large substorm. Source: NASA |





To examine the data, Ashour-Abdalla and a team of researchers from UCLA, Nanchang University in China, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, and the University of Maryland, Baltimore, used their expertise with computer modeling to simulate the complex dynamics that occur in space. The team began with spacecraft data from an ESA mission called Cluster that was in the solar wind at the time of the substorm. Using these observations of the solar environment, they modeled large scale electric and magnetic fields in space around Earth. Then they modeled the future fate of the various particles observed.