A visualization of the constant outflow of material from the sun, known as the solar wind. There is no consensus on what powers the solar wind’s acceleration, its extreme variability, or its remarkably high temperatures.
Credits: ESA/NASA/SOHO
Much like the flapping of a windsock displays the quick changes in
wind’s speed and direction, called turbulence, comet tails can be used
as probes of the solar wind – the constant flowing stream of material
that leaves the sun in all directions. According to new studies of a
comet tail observed by NASA’s Solar and Terrestrial Relations
Observatory, or STEREO, the vacuum of interplanetary space is filled
with turbulence and swirling vortices similar to gusts of wind on Earth.
Such turbulence can help explain two of the wind's most curious
features: its variable nature and unexpectedly high temperatures. A
paper on this work was published in “The Astrophysical Journal” on Oct.
13, 2015.
“The solar wind at Earth is about 70 times hotter than one might
expect from the temperature of the solar corona and how much it expands
as it crosses the void,” said Craig DeForest, a solar physicist at the
Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado, and lead author on
the study. “The source of this extra heat has been a mystery of solar
wind physics for several decades.”
There is much that is conclusively known about the solar wind: It is
made of a sea of electrically-charged electrons and ions and also
carries the interplanetary magnetic field along for the ride, forging a
magnetic connection between the sun and Earth and the other planets in
the solar system. There is no consensus, however, on what powers the
wind's acceleration, especially when it is traveling at its fastest
speeds.
Complicating the search for such understanding are two of its
most distinctive characteristics: The solar wind can be highly variable,
meaning that measurements just short times or distances apart can yield
quite different results. It is also very, very hot—remarkably so.
The new study helped explain these characteristics using the
heliospheric imager onboard STEREO. The scientists studied the movements
of hundreds of dense chunks of glowing ionized gas within the ribbon of
Comet Encke’s tail, which passed within STEREO’s field of view in 2007.
Fluctuations in the solar wind are mirrored in what is seen in the
tail, so by tracking these clumps, scientists were able to reconstruct
the motion of the solar wind, catching an unprecedented look at the
turbulence.
Identifying this turbulence in the solar wind has the potential to
solve the mystery of how the solar wind gets so hot. Based on the
intensity of the turbulence researchers saw, they calculated that the
energy available from turbulence is more than ten times what would be
required to heat the solar wind to observed temperatures.
What's more, it also helps to solve the variability problem, which other theories have not yet done successfully.
“This turbulent motion mixes up the solar wind, leading to the rapid variation that we see at Earth,” said DeForest.
For years, scientists have taken direct measurements of the solar
wind—known as in situ measurements, which are captured as the solar wind
passes over one of the dozens of satellites carrying the appropriate
instruments. Most of these satellites observe the sun from a vantage
point similar to that of Earth.
STEREO-A, however, orbits the sun in a
slightly smaller and faster orbit than Earth, meaning it moves around
the sun farther and farther from Earth over time. So, in addition to the
images of Comet Encke as it streamed past in April 2007, STEREO-A also
provides us with in situ solar wind measurements from a unique perspective.
On the other hand, the solar wind is notoriously hard to study
remotely—that is, with measurements from afar. Its particles flow at 250
miles per second, and they are so dispersed that interplanetary space
at Earth’s orbit has about a thousand times fewer particles in one cubic
inch of space than the best laboratory vacuum on Earth.
This solar wind dominates the space environment within our solar
system and travels well past Pluto, creating a huge bubble known as the
heliosphere. Closer to home, the solar wind also interacts with Earth’s
magnetic field, sometimes initiating changes in near-Earth space that
can disrupt our space technology or cause auroras. So scientists needed
to come up with a way to look at something that’s invisible—and that’s
where Comet Encke came in.
Comet Encke’s ion tail can be seen stretching away
from the sun towards the top of the image, captured by NASA’s MESSENGER
spacecraft on Nov. 17, 2013, when the comet was about 33 million miles
from the sun. The tail is created when the solar wind sweeps over the
comet, capturing vaporized material and causing it to trail out behind
the comet. The tail follows the lines of the magnetic field ingrained in
the solar wind and reveals its motion. Credits: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied
Physics Laboratory/Carnegie Institution of Washington/Southwest Research
Institute
All comets, if they get close enough to the sun, will form what’s
called an ion tail. One of the most recognizable features of these hunks
of ice and rock, the ion tail is created when the solar wind—made of
hot, charged gas, called plasma—sweeps over the comet, capturing the
material that has been vaporized into plasma by sunlight, causing it to
trail out behind the comet. This tail follows the lines of the magnetic
field embedded in the solar wind and reveals its motion.
Comet Encke has some unusual characteristics that scientists were
able to leverage to study the solar wind. Unlike most comets, Comet
Encke has what is called a compact tail. Rather than feathering out
loosely, creating a wide spray of ions, Comet Encke’s ion tail streams
out in a tight, bright ribbon of glowing gas with compact features.
This video, captured by NASA’s STEREO mission,
shows the motion of Comet Encke and its tail as it approached the sun in
April 2007. Scientists studied the movements of hundreds of dense
chunks of glowing ionized gas within the comet's tail, finding evidence
of turbulence that may explain both the solar wind’s variability and its
unexpectedly high temperatures. Credits: NASA/STEREO
"In situ measurements are limited because they
don't follow the turbulence along its path,” said William Matthaeus, a
professor of physics and astronomy at the University of Delaware and
co-author on the study. “Now, for the first time, we observed the
turbulent motions along their complex paths and quantified the mixing.
We actually see the turbulence.”
Using the images from STEREO-A, scientists tracked 230 different
features as they weaved through Comet Encke’s tail over the course of
about 9.3 million miles of its journey around the sun. They then
compared these motions to how they would expect solid objects to orbit
around the sun, finding evidence that these gas clumps were being picked
up by drag against the solar wind. They found that, though the gas
clumps moved more or less randomly on smaller scales, they exhibited
clear patterns on the scale of about 300,000 miles, indicating
large-scale swirling eddies are mixing the solar wind—and possibly
heating it as well.
“Turbulent motion cascades down into motion on smaller and smaller
scales until it hits the level of the fundamental gyrations of the
particles about the magnetic field, where it becomes heat,” said Aaron
Roberts, a heliophysicist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland. “This study estimates that there is enough energy
contained in these swirling eddies to explain the extra heat several
times over.”
These observations of the solar wind provide a preview of what NASA
plans to observe more directly with the Solar Probe Plus, or SPP,
mission in 2018. SPP will travel to within nine solar radii of the sun,
which is nine times the radius of the Sun, or about 3.9 million miles.
Since it’s possible to remotely observe comets closer to the sun than
any spacecraft can travel, studying them does provide unique information
about the solar wind and our sun’s atmosphere.
STEREO is the third mission in the NASA Heliophysics Division’s Solar
Terrestrial Probes program, which is managed by NASA Goddard for NASA’s
Science Mission Directorate, in Washington.
Editor: Ashley Morrow
Source: NASA/Sun