Cary Forest,
a UW-Madison physics professor, is stirring and heating plasmas to
500,000 degrees Fahrenheit to experimentally mimic the magnetic
field-inducing cosmic dynamos at the heart of planets, stars and other
celestial bodies.
Ninety-three million miles away, the sun’s magnetic field — and
presumably its dynamo — is churning and undulating as the star
experiences the height of the so-called solar maximum, where the sun’s
magnetic field contorts and eventually flips.
“Solar max,” as scientists call it, is an 11-year cycle where the
sun’s magnetic field reverses polarity, typically spawning sunspots,
flares, auroras and geomagnetic storms that, if large enough, can
disrupt satellites and fry power grids on Earth.
Over a period of about two years, “the sun’s magnetic field switches
directions, and we know that because the polarity of the sunspots
changes,” explains Forest, an expert on cosmic dynamos and the magnetic
fields they generate in planets, stars and other objects. “Sunspots are
just magnetic fields emerging from the sun. They are the diagnostic
feature of what’s happening deep inside the sun.”
Flowing streams of electrons and protons are what create the magnetic
fields deep in the sun’s interior. Those surging fields generate
sunspots, which can sometimes erupt and release vast amounts of energy
in the form of solar flares or hiccups of material known as coronal mass
ejections.
Unlike the Earth’s magnetic field, which moves up or down as a
familiar dipole, the sun’s huge magnetic field oscillates and is less
evident at the poles of the sun than at its midsection, where sunspots
typically occur. “The sun has an AC rather than a DC dynamo,” says
Forest.
Although solar max usually gives rise to numerous sunspots as well as
big solar flares and storms, the current edition is characterized by
tranquil inactivity. There are few sunspots and no massive storms to
speak of, says Forest. But the Wisconsin physicist also notes that last
year, when solar max was just getting underway, proved to be a great
year for auroras, the colorful curtains, bands and streamers of light
observed near the poles of the Earth caused by the charged particles
from the solar wind colliding with atoms high in the atmosphere.
“You can think about the aurora as a crown, centered on magnetic
north or south,” Forest says noting that the charged particles are
tugged into the atmosphere by Earth’s magnetic field, creating the
beautiful red, green and yellow displays of light. “Last year’s display
was really good.”
Although this cycle of sun activity is, so far, relatively wimpy,
past episodes of the solar maximum have been quite violent and caused
serious disruption on Earth. “Every couple of hundred years, there is a
major solar flare,” Forest says, “and that sends a pulse capable of
doing some serious stuff on Earth.”
In 1859, a solar superstorm known as the “Carrington Event” after the
British astronomer who was the first to observe a massive flare on the
sun, created auroras that were so bright that people could read by their
light and Rocky Mountain gold miners were stirred from sleep, thinking
it was daylight. The event spawned a geomagnetic storm that caused
telegraph systems in Europe and North America to fail, throwing sparks
from pylons and even giving some telegraph operators shocks. In 1989, a
massive geomagnetic storm caused by a coronal mass ejection during solar
max, sparked the collapse of the electrical transmission system in
Quebec.
“Electrical transmission grids can act like a big receiver that
doesn’t know how to deal with the energy when it comes in,” says Forest,
who explains that scientists think very large and potentially dangerous
events occur about every one thousand years or so.
“We see these events on stars all the time,” he says. From our sun,
he adds, “superflares would likely cause serious problems, disrupting
power grids satellites and other system we depend on.”
In a 3-meter diameter hollow aluminum sphere,
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