On April 28, 2021, at 0933 UT (3:33 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time), NASA's
Parker Solar Probe reached the sun's extended solar atmosphere, known as the
corona, and spent five hours there. The spacecraft is the first to enter the
outer boundaries of our sun.
The results, published in Physical Review Letters, were announced in a press
conference at the American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting 2021 on December
14. The manuscript is open-access and freely available to download.
"This marks the achievement of the primary objective of the Parker mission
and a new era for understanding the physics of the corona," said Justin C.
Kasper, the first author, Deputy Chief Technology Officer at BWX
Technologies, and a professor at the University of Michigan. The mission is
led by the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (JHU/APL).
The probe made the first direct observations of what lies within the sun's
atmosphere, measuring phenomena previously only estimated.
The sun's outer edge begins at the Alfvén critical surface: the point below
which the sun and its gravitational and magnetic forces directly control the
solar wind. Many scientists think that sudden reverses in the sun's magnetic
field, called switchbacks, emerge from this area.
"The concept of sending spacecraft into the magnetized atmosphere of the
sun—sufficiently close that the magnetic energy is greater than both ion and
electron kinetic and thermal energy—predated NASA itself," said Kasper.
In 2018, NASA launched Parker Solar Probe with the goal of finally reaching
the sun's corona and making humanity's first visit to a star.
This past April, the probe spent five hours below the Alfvén critical
surface in direct contact with the sun's plasma. Below that surface, the
pressure and energy of the sun's magnetic field was stronger than the
pressure and energy of the particles. The spacecraft passed above and below
the surface three separate times during its encounter. This is the first
time a spacecraft has entered the solar corona and touched the atmosphere of
the sun.
Surprisingly, the researchers discovered that the Alfvén critical surface is
wrinkled. The data suggest that the largest and most distant wrinkle of the
surface was produced by a pseudostreamer—a large magnetic structure more
than 40 degrees across, found back on the innermost visible face of the sun.
It is not currently known why a pseudostreamer would push the Alfvén
critical surface away from the sun.
Researchers noticed far fewer switchbacks below the Alfvén critical surface
than above it. The finding could mean that switchbacks do not form within
the corona. Alternatively, low rates of magnetic reconnection on the sun's
surface could have pumped less mass into the observed wind stream, resulting
in fewer switchbacks.
The probe also recorded some evidence of a potential power boost just inside
the corona, which may point to unknown physics affecting heating and
dissipation.
"We have been observing the sun and its corona for decades, and we know
there is interesting physics going on there to heat and accelerate the solar
wind plasma. Still, we cannot tell precisely what that physics is," said
Nour E. Raouafi, the Parker Solar Probe Project Scientist at JHU/APL. "With
Parker Solar Probe now flying into the magnetically-dominated corona, we
will get the long-awaited insights into the inner workings of this
mysterious region."
The observations took place during Parker Solar Probe's eighth encounter
with the sun. All data is publicly available in the NASA PSP archive.
Several previous studies predicted the probe would first pass within the
sun's boundaries in 2021.
The fastest known object built by humans, Parker Solar Probe has made many
new discoveries since its launch, including on explosions that create space
weather and the dangers of super-speedy dust.
The new findings suggest that direct observations by spacecraft have much to
illuminate about the physics of coronal heating and solar wind formation.
Having achieved its goal of touching the sun, Parker Solar Probe will now
descend even deeper into the sun's atmosphere and linger for longer periods
of time.
According to Gary Zank, a coinvestigator on the probe's Solar Wind Electrons
Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) instrument and a member of the National Academy
of Sciences, "It is hard to overstate the significance of both the event and
the observations made by Parker Solar Probe. For over 50 years, since the
dawn of the space age, the heliospheric community has grappled with the
unanswered problem of how the solar corona is heated to well over a million
degrees to drive the solar wind. The first measurements of the sub-Alfvénic
solar wind may represent the most major step forward in understanding the
physics behind the acceleration of the solar wind since the formative model
by Parker."
"This event is what many heliophysicists have dreamed about for most of
their careers!" Zank added.
Reference:
J. C. Kasper et al, Parker Solar Probe Enters the Magnetically Dominated
Solar Corona, Physical Review Letters (2021).
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.255101
Tags:
Space & Astrophysics
I'm surprised there were no comments regarding the heat that had to be overcome by such a close encounter.
ReplyDeleteWas it indeed a very hot visit?