NASA and NSF Computers Simulate Sun's Corona

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June 26, 2006

Erica Hupp/Grey Hautaluoma
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1237/0668

Bill Steigerwald/Nancy Neal-Jones
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-5017/0039

RELEASE: 06-247

NASA AND NSF COMPUTERS SIMULATE SUN'S CORONA

For the first time, researchers have developed a computer simulation 
that can accurately create a model of the sun's outer atmosphere, or 
corona. Funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation, the 
computer model marks the beginning of a new era in space weather 
prediction.

By accurately simulating the behavior of the corona, scientists hope 
to eventually predict when it will produce flares and coronal mass 
ejections, huge clouds of hot plasma ejected from the sun. It's the 
same approach the National Weather Service uses to predict when the 
Earth's atmosphere will produce thunderstorms or hurricanes.

Such predictions will help protect astronauts against radiation from 
flares and coronal mass ejections, in addition to mitigating 
disruptions on orbiting satellites and land-based communications and 
power systems.

"This confirms that computer models can describe the physics of the 
solar corona," said Zoran Mikic of Science Applications International 
Corp, San Diego, Calif. The turbulent corona is threaded with 
magnetic fields generated beneath the visible solar surface. The 
evolution of these magnetic fields causes violent eruptions and solar 
storms originating in the corona.

The computer model was based on spacecraft observations of magnetic 
activity on the sun's surface, which affects and shapes the corona. 
The observations were made with the Michelson Doppler Imager 
instrument on the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) 
spacecraft. The Science Applications International Corporation team 
released simulated "photographs" of the March 29 total solar eclipse 
13 days before and again 5 days before the actual event.

Previous computer simulations were based on simplified models, so the 
calculations could be completed in a reasonable time. The new 
simulation is the first to base its calculations on the physics of 
how energy is transferred in the corona. Even using NASA and the 
National Science Foundation supercomputers, the calculations required 
four days to complete on about 700 computer processors.

During a total solar eclipse, the moon blocks direct light from the 
sun, so the much fainter corona is visible. This is the only time the 
corona is visible from Earth without special instruments, and it 
resembles a white, lacy veil surrounding the black disk of the moon. 
Because the corona is always changing, each eclipse looks different.

Since the physics of the corona is still not completely understood, 
the accuracy of the simulation will improve when our understanding of 
how energy flows through the corona improves. More detailed 
measurements of magnetic activity on the solar surface, like those 
expected from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory scheduled to launch 
in 2008, will also improve the accuracy of the simulation.

Researchers are presenting the findings today at the American 
Astronomical Society's Solar Physics Division Meeting in Durham, N.H. 
For additional information and graphics, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/corona_telecon.html

This research was sponsored in part by National Science Foundation's 
Center for Integrated Space Weather Modeling program and NASA's 
Living With a Star and Sun-Earth Connection Theory Program. SOHO is a 
joint effort between NASA and the European Space Agency.

	
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