NASA'S Fermi Detects The Highest-Energy Light From A Solar Flare

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June 11, 2012

J. D. Harrington 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-5241 
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-193

NASA'S FERMI DETECTS THE HIGHEST-ENERGY LIGHT FROM A SOLAR FLARE

WASHINGTON -- During a powerful solar blast on March 7, NASA's Fermi 
Gamma-ray Space Telescope detected the highest-energy light ever 
associated with an eruption on the sun. The discovery heralds Fermi's 
new role as a solar observatory, a powerful new tool for 
understanding solar outbursts during the sun's maximum period of 
activity. 

A solar flare is an explosive blast of light and charged particles. 
The powerful March 7 flare, which earned a classification of X5.4 
based on the peak intensity of its X-rays, is the strongest eruption 
so far observed by Fermi's Large Area Telescope (LAT). The flare 
produced such an outpouring of gamma rays -- a form of light with 
even greater energy than X-rays -- that the sun briefly became the 
brightest object in the gamma-ray sky. 

"For most of Fermi's four years in orbit, its LAT saw the sun as a 
faint, steady gamma-ray source thanks to the impacts of high-speed 
particles called cosmic rays," said Nicola Omodei, an astrophysicist 
at Stanford University in California. "Now we're beginning to see 
what the sun itself can do." 

Omodei described Fermi's solar studies to journalists today at the 
220th meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Anchorage, 
Alaska. 

At the flare's peak, the LAT detected gamma rays with two billion 
times the energy of visible light, or about four billion electron 
volts (GeV), easily setting a record for the highest-energy light 
ever detected during or immediately after a solar flare. The flux of 
high-energy gamma rays, defined as those with energies beyond 100 
million electron volts (MeV), was 1,000 times greater than the sun's 
steady output. 

The March flare also is notable for the persistence of its gamma-ray 
emission. Fermi's LAT detected high-energy gamma rays for about 20 
hours, two and a half times longer than any event on record. 

Additionally, the event marks the first time a greater-than-100-MeV 
gamma-ray source has been localized to the sun's disk, thanks to the 
LAT's keen angular resolution. 

Flares and other eruptive solar events produce gamma rays by 
accelerating charged particles, which then collide with matter in the 
sun's atmosphere and visible surface. For instance, interactions 
among protons result in short-lived subatomic particles called pions, 
which produce high-energy gamma rays when they decay. Nuclei excited 
by collisions with lower-energy ions give off characteristic gamma 
rays as they settle down. Accelerated electrons emit gamma rays as 
they collide with protons and atomic nuclei. 

Fermi's LAT scans the entire sky every 3 hours, looking for gamma rays 
with energies ranging from 20 MeV to more than 300 GeV. Its high 
sensitivity and wide field of view make the LAT an excellent tool for 
solar monitoring. 

Another Fermi instrument, the Gamma-ray Burst Monitor (GBM), observes 
the entire sky not blocked by the Earth at any given moment. Designed 
to detect light at energies from 8,000 eV to 40 MeV, the GBM's 
complementary capabilities give scientists access to a lower, but 
overlapping energy range where solar phenomena produce interesting 
features. 

Both instruments observed a strong, but less powerful solar flare on 
June 12, 2010. 

"Seeing the rise and fall of this brief flare in both instruments 
allowed us to determine that some of these particles were accelerated 
to two-thirds of the speed of light in as little as 3 seconds," said 
Michael Briggs, a member of GBM team at the University of Alabama in 
Huntsville. 

Solar eruptions are on the rise as the sun progresses toward the peak 
of its roughly 11-year-long activity cycle, now expected in mid-2013. 


"Merged with available theoretical models, Fermi observations will 
give us the ability to reconstruct the energies and types of 
particles that interact with the sun during flares, an understanding 
that will open up whole new avenues in solar research," said Gerald 
Share, an astrophysicist at the University of Maryland in College 
Park. 

NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is an astrophysics and particle 
physics partnership. Fermi is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight 
Center, Greenbelt, Md. It was developed in collaboration with the 
U.S. Department of Energy, with contributions from academic 
institutions and partners in France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden 
and the United States. 

For images related to this finding, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/fermi 

	
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