International Spacecraft Reveals Detailed Processes on the Sun

[Date Prev] [Date Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Index] [Thread Index]

 



Mar. 21, 2007

Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726

Steve Roy
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala. 
256-544-0034 

RELEASE: 07-72

INTERNATIONAL SPACECRAFT REVEALS DETAILED PROCESSES ON THE SUN

WASHINGTON - NASA released on Wednesday never-before-seen images that 
show the sun's magnetic field is much more turbulent and dynamic than 
previously known. The international spacecraft Hinode, formerly known 
as Solar B, took the images.

Hinode, Japanese for "sunrise," was launched Sept. 23, 2006, to study 
the sun's magnetic field and how its explosive energy propagates 
through the different layers of the solar atmosphere. The 
spacecraft's uninterrupted high-resolution observations of the sun 
will have an impact on solar physics comparable to the Hubble Space 
Telescope's impact on astronomy. 

"For the first time, we are now able to make out tiny granules of hot 
gas that rise and fall in the sun's magnetized atmosphere," said Dick 
Fisher, director of NASA's Heliophyics Division, Science Mission 
Directorate, Washington. "These images will open a new era of study 
on some of the sun's processes that effect Earth, astronauts, 
orbiting satellites and the solar system."

Hinode's three primary instruments, the Solar Optical Telescope, the 
X-ray Telescope and the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer, are 
observing the different layers of the sun. Studies focus on the solar 
atmosphere from the visible surface of the sun, known as the 
photosphere, to the corona, the outer atmosphere of the sun that 
extends outward into the solar system. 

"By coordinating the measurements of all three instruments, Hinode is 
showing how changes in the structure of the magnetic field and the 
release of magnetic energy in the low atmosphere spread outward 
through the corona and into interplanetary space to create space 
weather," said John Davis, project scientist from NASA's Marshall 
Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.

Space weather involves the production of energetic particles and 
emissions of electromagnetic radiation. These bursts of energy can 
black out long-distance communications over entire continents and 
disrupt the global navigational system.

"Hinode images are revealing irrefutable evidence for the presence of 
turbulence-driven processes that are bringing magnetic fields, on all 
scales, to the sun's surface, resulting in an extremely dynamic 
chromosphere or gaseous envelope around the sun," said Alan Title, a 
corporate senior fellow at Lockheed Martin, Palo Alto, Calif., and 
consulting professor of physics at Stanford University, Stanford, 
Calif. 

Hinode is a collaborative mission led by the Japan Aerospace 
Exploration Agency and includes the European Space Agency and 
Britain's Particle Physics Astronomy Research Council. The National 
Astronomical Observatory of Japan, Tokyo, developed the Solar Optical 
Telescope, which provided the fine-scale structure views of the sun's 
lower atmosphere, and developed the X-ray Telescope in collaboration 
with the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory of Cambridge, Mass. 
The X-ray Telescope captured the rapid, time-sequenced images of 
explosive events in the sun's outer atmosphere.

"By following the evolution of the solar structures that outline the 
magnetic field before, during and after these explosive events, we 
hope to find clear evidence to establish that magnetic reconnection 
is the underlying cause for this explosive activity," said Leon Golub 
of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. 

The Marshall Space Flight Center manages the development of the 
scientific instrumentation provided for the mission by NASA, industry 
and other federal agencies. 

For more information about Hinode, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/hinode 

	
-end-



To subscribe to the list, send a message to: 
hqnews-subscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
To remove your address from the list, send a message to:
hqnews-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
[Index of Archives]     [JPL News]     [Cassini News From Saturn]     [NASA Marshall Space Flight Center News]     [NASA Science News]     [James Web Space Telescope News]     [JPL Home]     [NASA KSC]     [NTSB]     [Deep Creek Hot Springs]     [Yosemite Discussion]     [NSF]     [Telescopes]

  Powered by Linux