The sun's volatile atmosphere is even bigger than expected, a NASA spacecraft revealed through observations of gigantic waves.
While the sun
itself is 864,938 miles (1.392 million kilometers) wide, NASA's Solar
Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or STEREO, found that the solar atmosphere, known as the corona, stretches 5 million miles (8 million km) above the sun's surface.
"We've
tracked sound-like waves through the outer corona and used these to map
the atmosphere," Craig DeForest of the Southwest Research Institute in
Boulder, Colorado, said in a statement
from NASA. "We can't hear the sounds directly through the vacuum of
space, but with careful analysis we can see them rippling through the
corona."
These waves, called
magnetosonic waves, are a cross between sound waves and magnetic waves
called Alfven waves. They oscillate only about once every four hours and
span 10 times the width of Earth, NASA officials said.
When
magnetosonic waves erupt from solar storms and other disturbances, they
can ripple up to 5 million miles away from the sun's surface, DeForest
and colleagues found. Beyond this boundary, solar material separates
from the corona and flows out into space in a steady stream known as the
solar wind.
NASA officials
say the findings will help researchers prepare for the space agency's
Solar Probe Plus mission, scheduled to launch in 2018. That mission will
send a spacecraft closer to the sun that
any man-made object has ever ventured — within 4 million miles (6.4
million km) of the sun's surface. Now, scientists know the probe will
actually be traveling through the corona during its historic trip.
"This
research provides confidence that Solar Probe Plus, as designed, will
be exploring the inner solar magnetic system," Marco Velli, a Solar
Probe Plus scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
California, said in a statement. "The mission will directly measure the
density, velocity and magnetic field of the solar material there,
allowing us to understand how motion and heat in the corona and solar
wind are generated."
The
findings, which were published last month in The Astrophysical Journal,
should also help astronomers define the inner boundary of the heliosphere, the giant bubble enveloping the solar system, created by the solar wind and solar magnetic field.
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