As Earth moves around the sun, it travels surrounded by a giant bubble created
by its own magnetic fields, called the magnetosphere. As the magnetosphere plows
through space, it sets up a standing bow wave or bow shock, much like that in
front of a moving ship. Just in front of this bow wave lies a complex, turbulent
system called the foreshock. Conditions in the foreshock change in response to
solar particles streaming in from the sun, moving magnetic fields and a host of
waves, some fast, some slow, sweeping through the region.
To tease out
what happens at that boundary of the magnetosphere and to better understand how
radiation and energy from the sun can cross it and move closer to Earth, NASA
launches spacecraft into this region to observe the changing conditions. From
1998 to 2002, NASA’s Wind spacecraft traveled through this foreshock region in
front of Earth 17 times, providing new information about the physics
there.
“I stumbled on some cool squiggles in the data,” says Lynn Wilson,
who is deputy project scientist for Wind at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Md. “They turned out to be a special kind of magnetic pulsations
called short large amplitude magnetic structures, which we call SLAMS for
short.”
SLAMS are waves with a single, large peak, a little like giant
rogue waves that can develop in the deep ocean. By studying the region around
the SLAMS and how they propagate, the Wind data showed SLAMS may provide an
improved explanation for what accelerates narrow jets of charged particles back
out into space, away from Earth. Tracking how any phenomenon catalyzes the
movement of other particles is one of the crucial needs for modeling this
region. In this case, understanding just how a wave can help initiate a
fast-moving beam might also help explain what causes incredibly powerful rays
that travel from other solar systems across interstellar space toward Earth.
Wilson and his colleagues published a paper on these results in the Journal of
Geophysical Research online on March 6, 2013.
The material pervading this
area of space – indeed all outer space – is known as plasma. Plasma is much like
a gas, but each particle is electrically charged so movement is governed as much
by the laws of electromagnetics as it is by the fundamental laws of gravity and
motion we more regularly experience on Earth.
“One of the unique things
about space weather is how little things can have big effects,” says David
Sibeck, a space scientist at Goddard who is a co-author on the paper. “An event
might seem small and just generate local turbulence, but it can have profound
effects downstream. The front of the magnetosphere is right in the line between
sun and Earth, so it’s a crucial place to understand which small things can lead
to big results.”
Since the 1970s, researchers have known that particles
seem to be reflecting off the magnetosphere, creating intense particle jets
called field aligned ion beams, but it’s not been clear how. Now, the Wind data
helps provide a more detailed snapshot of how they form, as it travels through a
slew of SLAMS and the ion beams.
The scientists’ job was to map where
these events happen in space and time and to try to determine which events
initiate which. Wilson says that the solar wind constantly moves toward Earth’s
bow shock and then reflects off it.
“These structures get excited
upstream and they start to grow and steepen, kind of like a water wave,” says
Wilson. “But instead of breaking and tumbling over, they stand up, getting
bigger and faster.” He says that the SLAMS attempt to move against the gale of
solar wind streaming toward them, but ultimately get pushed back, creating a new
messy boundary in front of the magnetosphere. “And then they effectively create
their own new bow shock,” says Wilson.
Without the SLAMS, one would
expect incoming particles from the solar wind to skip and slide along the
outside of the bow shock, the way flowing water in a river might move around a
large rock. But the SLAMS create a kind of magnetic mirror, causing the solar
particles to reflect, attenuating them into one of these field-aligned ion
beams, shooting out along magnetic fields back out and away from
Earth.
Wind data does not inherently show which of these things create
the other, it simply shows the presence of both. However, the ion beams were not
seen in the space between the front of the true bow shock and the SLAMS -- only
streaming away from the SLAMS out toward space. The beams also only appeared
after the SLAMS had a chance to fully form. This strengthened the conclusion
that the SLAMS themselves lead to the beams, acting as a magnetic mirror to
reflect the particles outward.
The more we know about what happens in the
frothy, turbulent area in front of Earth, the more we know about how the solar
wind and other material bursting off the sun may be able to penetrate into near
Earth-space.
“What happens to Earth’s magnetic field depends on what’s
happening here at the front of the bow shock,” says Sibeck. “And what’s
happening there is dramatic. It’s going to affect how much energy moves into the
magnetosphere. Once inside the magnetosphere, it can create powerful solar
storms and impact communications and GPS satellites that we depend on
daily.”
The observations also have implications beyond protecting Earth.
By sending spacecraft to observe plasma here, scientists can take advantage of
the only area of the universe where we can study such plasma movement directly
-- and thus apply the research to information about stars across the galaxy as
well. For example, astrophysicists would like to better understand what causes
cosmic ray acceleration -- particles that are generally much faster than the
field aligned ion beams, but accelerated in similar manners, says Wilson. One
theory is that a magnetic mirror of some kind causes the particles to bounce
back and forth and gain more speed and energy as the mirrors move closer
together. Near the front of the magnetosphere, the SLAMS might be doing just
that.
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