A suite of NASA's sun-gazing spacecraft have spotted an unusual series of
eruptions in which a series of fast puffs forced the slow ejection of a massive
burst of solar material from the sun's atmosphere. The eruptions took place over
a period of three days, starting on Jan. 17, 2013. Nathalia Alzate, a solar
scientist at the University of Aberystwyth in Wales, presented findings on what
caused the puffs at the 2014 Royal Astronomical Society's National Astronomy Meeting in
Portsmouth, England.
The sun's outermost atmosphere, the corona, is made of magnetized solar
material, called plasma, that has a temperature of millions of degrees and
extends millions of miles into space. On Jan. 17, the joint European Space
Agency and NASA's Solar and
Heliospheric Observatory, or SOHO, spacecraft observed puffs emanating from
the base of the corona and rapidly exploding outwards into interplanetary space.
The puffs occurred roughly once every three hours. After about 12 hours, a much
larger eruption of material began, apparently eased out by the smaller-scale
explosions.
By looking at high-resolution images taken by NASA's Solar Dynamics
Observatory, or SDO, and NASA's Solar
Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, over the same time period and
in different wavelengths, Alzate and her colleagues could focus on the cause of
the puffs and the interaction between the small and large-scale eruptions.
"Looking at the corona in extreme ultraviolet light we see the source of the
puffs is a series of energetic jets and related flares," said Alzate. "The jets
are localized, catastrophic releases of energy that spew material out from the
sun into space. These rapid changes in the magnetic field cause flares, which
release a huge amount of energy in a very short time in the form of super-heated
plasma, high-energy radiation and radio bursts. The big, slow structure is
reluctant to erupt, and does not begin to smoothly propagate outwards until
several jets have occurred."
Because the events were observed by multiple spacecraft, each viewing the sun
from a different perspective, Alzate and her colleagues were able to resolve the
three-dimensional configuration of the eruptions. This allowed them to estimate
the forces acting on the slow eruption and discuss possible mechanisms for the
interaction between the slow and fast phenomena.
"We still need to understand whether there are shock waves, formed by the
jets, passing through and driving the slow eruption," said Alzate. "Or whether
magnetic reconfiguration is driving the jets allowing the larger, slow structure
to slowly erupt. Thanks to recent advances in observation and in image
processing techniques we can throw light on the way jets can lead to small and
fast, or large and slow, eruptions from the sun."
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