ESA/NASA - SOHO updates

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jacqmans
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« on: 05/29/2007 08:21 PM »

ESA's SOHO has helped uncover radio screams that foretell dangerous Coronal Mass Ejections, or CMEs, which produce radiation storms harming infrastructure on ground, in space as well as humans in space.

More at:
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMOPF9RR1F_index_0.html
 
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« on: 05/29/2007 08:21 PM »

 
jacqmans
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« Reply #1 on: 05/29/2007 10:09 PM »

RELEASE:  07-31

MAGNETIC FIELD USES SOUND WAVES TO IGNITE SUN'S RING OF FIRE

Sound waves escaping the Sun's interior create fountains of hot gas that shape and power the chromosphere, a thin region of the sun's atmosphere which appears as a ruby red "ring of fire" around the moon during a total solar eclipse, according to research funded by NASA and the National Science Foundation (NSF). These results were presented May 29, at the American Astronomical Society Meeting in Honolulu, Hawaii.

The chromosphere is important because it is largely responsible for the deep ultraviolet radiation that bathes the Earth, producing our atmosphere's ozone layer, and it has the strongest solar connection to climate variability. The new result also helps explain a mystery that's existed since the middle of the last century -- why the chromosphere (and the tenuous corona above) is much hotter than the visible surface of the star. "It's like getting warmer as you move away from the fire instead of cooler, certainly not what you expect," said Scott McIntosh, a researcher at Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colo.

“This work finds the missing piece of the puzzle that has fascinated many generations of solar astronomers. When you fit this piece in place, our vision of the chromosphere becomes clear,” said Alexei Pevtsov, Program Scientist NASA Headquarters, Washington.

Using spacecraft, ground-based telescopes, and computer simulations, these new results show that the Sun's magnetic field allows the release of wave energy from its interior, permitting the sound waves to travel through thin fountains upward into the solar chromosphere. These magnetic fountains form the mold for the chromosphere.

"Scientists have long realized that solar magnetic fields hold the key to tapping the vast energy reservoir locked in the Sun's interior," said Paul Bellaire, program director in NSF's division of atmospheric sciences. "These researchers have found the ingenious way that the Sun uses magnetic keys to pick those locks."

Over the past twenty years, helioseismologists have studied energetic sound waves as probes of the Sun's interior structure because they are largely trapped by the Sun's visible surface -- the photosphere. The new research found that some of these waves can escape the photosphere into the chromosphere and corona.

To make the new discovery, the team used observations from the SOHO and TRACE spacecrafts combined with those from the Magneto-Optical filters at Two Heights (MOTH) instrument stationed in Antarctica, and the Swedish 1 meter (3 foot) Solar Telescope on the Canary Islands. The observations gave detailed insight into how some of these trapped waves manage to leak out through magnetic "cracks" in the photosphere, sending mass and energy shooting upwards into the atmosphere above. "The Sun's interior vibrates with the peal of millions of bells, but the bells are all on the inside of the building. We have been able to show how the sound can escape the building and travel a long way using the magnetic field as a guide," continued McIntosh.

By analyzing motions of structures in the solar atmosphere in detail, the scientists observed that near strong knots of magnetic field, sound waves from the interior of the Sun can leak out and propagate upward into its atmosphere. "The constantly evolving magnetic field above the solar surface acts like a doorman opening and closing the door for the waves that are constantly passing by," said Bart De Pontieu, a researcher Lockheed Martin Solar and Astrophysics Lab, Palo Alto, Calif.

These results were confirmed by state-of-the-art computer simulations that show how the leaking waves continually propel fountains of hot gas upward into the Sun's atmosphere, which fall back to its surface a few minutes later.

The scientists were able to independently demonstrate that the magnetic field controls the release of mass and wave energy into the solar atmosphere. The combination of these results demonstrates that a lot more energy can be pumped into the chromosphere by wave motions than researchers had previously thought. This wouldn't be possible without the relentlessly changing magnetic field at the surface.

The research team includes Stuart Jefferies, University of Hawaii, Maui, Hawaii; Scott McIntosh, Southwest Research Institute, Boulder, Colo.; Bart De Pontieu, Lockheed Martin, Palo Alto, Calif.; and Viggo Hansteen, University of Oslo, Norway and Lockheed Martin.

For related images and more information, please visit on the Web:

http://www.nasa.gov/vision/universe/solarsystem/ring_of_fire_media.html

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« Reply #2 on: 09/27/2007 01:49 PM »

PRESS RELEASE: 07-60

SOHO MISSION DISCOVERS RARE COMET

GREENBELT, Md. - The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) has discovered a rare periodic comet. During a mission where 1,350 comets have been discovered, this is the first time one has been officially designated "periodic."

Many of the comets SOHO has observed are believed to be periodic -- they follow their orbits around the sun more than twice and have orbital periods of less than 200 years. Thousands of comets have been seen by astronomers, but only around 190 are classified as periodic. Many more are believed to be. The most famous periodic comet is Halley’s comet, which comes near to the Earth every 76 years. Its most recent close pass to the sun was in 1986.

SOHO’s new find has a much smaller orbit than Halley's comet. It takes the comet approximately four years to travel once around the sun. It was first seen in September 1999 and then again in September 2003. In 2005, German PhD student Sebastian Hoenig realized that the two comets were so similar in orbit that they might actually be the same object. To test his theory, he calculated a combined orbit for the comet and consequently predicted that it would return on Sept. 11, 2007. Hoenig's prediction proved to be extremely accurate -- the comet reappeared in SOHO's Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph  camera right on schedule and has now been given the official designation of P/2007 R5 (SOHO). The credit for original discovery and recovery of the object goes to Terry Lovejoy (Australia, 1999), Kazimieras Cernis (Lithuania, 2003) and Bo Zhou (China, 2007).

A puzzling aspect to P/2007 R5 (SOHO) is that it does not look exactly like a comet. It has no visible tail or coma of dust and gas, as is traditionally associated with the pheonmena. Initially, this led some scientists to wonder if the object was actually an asteroid, a chunk of space-rock, rather than a chuck of space-ice. However, P/2007 R5 (SOHO) did exhibit some characteristics consistent with a comet. As scientists watched the object pass close to the sun, drawing to within 4.9 million miles, or around 5% of the distance between the Earth and the sun, they saw it brighten by a factor of around a million, which is common behavior for a comet.

“It is quite possibly an extinct comet nucleus of some kind,” says Karl Battams of the Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, who runs SOHO's comet discovery program. Extinct comets have expelled most of their volatile ices and retain little to form a tail or coma. They are theorized to be common objects among the celestial bodies orbiting close to the sun.

This comet faded as quickly as it brightened, and soon became too faint for SOHO's instruments to see. Estimates show that P/2007 R5 (SOHO) is probably only 100 to 200 yards in diameter. Given how small and faint this object is, and how close it still is to the sun, it is an extremely difficult target for observers on Earth to pick out in the sky.

Now we know for certain that P/2007 R5 (SOHO) is there, astronomers will be watching closely for it during its next return in September 2011.

SOHO is a cooperative project between the European Space Agency and NASA.

For an image, refer to:

http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/soho/soho_periodic_comet.html

For information about NASA and agency programs, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/home

jacqmans
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« Reply #3 on: 09/27/2007 01:49 PM »

It is nothing new for the ESA/NASA Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) to discover another comet - it has already found more than 1350. But the latest is a bit different - SOHO had spotted it twice before.

Full story:
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMAU2C1S6F_index_0.html
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« Reply #4 on: 01/14/2008 01:53 PM »

The appearance of a very special solar spot on the sun surface a few days ago, signalled to scientists around the world that a new solar cycle had begun. This solar spot also produced two solar blasts.

Full story:
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMT1J3MDAF_index_0.html
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« Reply #5 on: 04/18/2008 12:47 PM »

Data from the ESA/NASA spacecraft SOHO shows clearly that powerful starquakes ripple around the Sun in the wake of mighty solar flares that explode above its surface. The observations give solar physicists new insight into a long-running solar mystery and may even provide a way of studying other stars.


Read more at:

http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEM4SB4XQEF_index_0.html
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« Reply #6 on: 06/27/2008 10:29 AM »

The ESA/NASA SOHO spacecraft has just discovered its 1500th comet, making it more successful than all other comet discoverers throughout history put together. Not bad for a spacecraft that was designed as a solar physics mission.

More at:
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMB94SHKHF_index_0.html
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« Reply #7 on: 03/12/2010 06:13 PM »

Space Weather News for  March 12, 2010
http://spaceweather.com

Today, a newly discovered comet is plunging toward the sun for a close encounter it probably will not survive. The comet is rapidly vaporizing and appears very bright in coronagraph images from the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO).  Visit http://spaceweather.com for movies of the ongoing encounter and more information about the comet.
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« Reply #8 on: 10/12/2010 07:08 PM »

SOHO sheds new light on solar flares.

After detailed analysis of data from the SOHO and GOES spacecraft, a team of European scientists has been able to shed new light on the role of solar flares in the total output of radiation from our nearest star. Their surprising conclusion is that X-rays account for only about 1 per cent of the total energy emitted by these explosive events.

Flares are sudden energy releases in the Sun's atmosphere that occur when the solar magnetic field is locally unstable. When the magnetic field lines break and reconnect, large amounts of energy are released, accelerating the surrounding particles to almost the speed of light. The temperature of the flares can soar to millions of degrees. At such sizzling temperatures, much of their radiation is emitted as X-rays.

Not surprisingly, most flares are imaged and studied at X-ray or extreme ultraviolet wavelengths, since they are more difficult to observe and analyse in visible light. Although more than 20 000 flares occurred in the last solar cycle (1996-2007), only four exceptionally large ones were identified as contributors to the total solar irradiance (TSI) , i.e. the light received at all wavelengths on Earth.

In an effort to calculate how much energy is actually contributed to the TSI by flares, researchers from the Laboratoire de Physique et Chimie de l'Environnement et de l'Espace (LPC2E) in Orléans (France), collaborating with Swiss and Belgium teams, have been analysing 11 years of observations from space.

The team analysed the record of X-ray data acquired by the US GOES spacecraft during the entire solar cycle to detect the flares and record the times of their peak activity. The scientists eventually selected about 2000 flares which occurred near the centre of the solar disc. They then turned to the PMO and DIARAD radiometers of the VIRGO experiment on board the ESA/NASA SOHO spacecraft for information about the overall solar radiation heading toward Earth.

The next task was to identify any small peaks in TSI caused by the flares. This task was complicated by the random 'noise' generated by the Sun's turbulent atmosphere. In order to recognise the contribution due to flares alone, the team used a statistical method to superimpose X-ray and TSI data taken at short time intervals around the period when a flare occurred. In this way, they were able to remove the random 'noise' from the data.

"The problem was to recognise the overall output from flares, radiated simultaneously at all wavelengths and in the visible domain, despite the natural fluctuations of the solar irradiance," said Matthieu Kretzschmar, researcher at the LPC2E and first author of the study in Nature Physics. "It is like looking for 1-metre-high waves, caused by flares, within a rough sea where there are 70-metre-high waves caused by natural fluctuations."

"To solve this problem, we amplified the 'one-meter-high waves' using the 'superposed-epoch analysis' method. The idea was to temporally superpose the total irradiance light curves for several flares. Natural random fluctuations in the solar irradiance cancel each other out, but the fluctuations caused by the flares are added and amplified."

The analysis led to a surprising result: there was a significant peak in the TSI when a flare occurred. Not only was the total radiative output of the Sun sensitive to both large and small flares, but the total energy radiated by flares was found to be over 100 times greater than the energy that they radiate in X-rays. It turns out that X-rays contribute only a tiny part of the overall output of radiation during solar flares.

These results, obtained within the framework of the European Community's SOTERIA project, will help to improve current theoretical models of flares and understanding of the variability in the solar irradiance that reaches our planet. They could also help to shed light on the behaviour of more distant stars, some of which may also host planetary systems.

"Many stars are much more active than our Sun and emit extremely powerful flares," said Bernhard Fleck, ESA's SOHO Project Scientist. "This new estimate of the energy distribution of solar flares suggests that such flares may be extremely bright in visible light as well as X-rays, possibly with dramatic consequences for any nearby planets."


http://sci.esa.int/science-e/www/object/index.cfm?fobjectid=47814
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« Reply #9 on: 05/14/2011 10:02 PM »

Okay, this definitely deserves a bump.

Check this out, it's fantastic:

http://ca.news.yahoo.com/blogs/daily-buzz/nasa-captures-stunning-video-comet-hitting-sun-193131383.html

I haven't see the video posted on NASA's SOHO site yet.
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« Reply #10 on: 12/15/2011 10:51 AM »

The beginning of the end for comet Lovejoy

14 December 2011

The SOHO spaceborne solar observatory today captured comet Lovejoy in its field of view for the first time, indicating that the icy body is on its final destructive plunge towards the Sun.

Announced on 2 December, the newly discovered comet Lovejoy is on a near-collision course with the Sun and is expected to plunge to its fiery fate late on 15 December.

http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEM3HD8XZVG_index_0.html
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« Reply #11 on: 01/27/2012 03:33 PM »

Solar flare seen by ESA/NASA SOHO satellite 23 January, shortly after a large M8.3-class solar flare occurred at 03:59 GMT. The flare caused a Coronal Mass Ejection that reached Earth in the afternoon of 24 January 2012. Credits: ESA/NASA

http://www.esa.int/esa-mmg/mmg.pl?type=A&single=y&start=1
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« Reply #12 on: 03/05/2012 04:34 PM »

Solar flare pushes plasma cloud toward Earth
 
5 March 2012

A large solar flare erupted from the Sun earlier today, launching a coronal mass ejection (CME) into space. This plasma 'cloud' is expected to pass Earth in 2 to 3 days, potentially causing increased nighttime auroras. No major effects on Earth are expected.
 
The solar flare occurred at about 05:05 CET today, and the resulting CME was detected by the Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) instrument on board the ESA/NASA Solar & Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) mission.

The solar flare was categorised by scientists as an 'X-class' flare; these are major events that can trigger planet-wide radio blackouts and long-lasting radiation storms.

http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/SSA/SEML3F7YBZG_0.html
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« Reply #13 on: 03/07/2012 02:18 AM »

If you go check spaceweather.com a X5 just fired off... Life is about to get interesting 8)

Quote
MAJOR SOLAR FLARE: Earth-orbiting satellites have just detected an X5-class solar flare from big sunspot AR1429. The blast peaked on March 7th at 00:28 UT. Radiation storms and radio blackouts are possible. Solar flare alerts: text, phone.
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« Reply #14 on: 03/07/2012 02:40 AM »

If you go check spaceweather.com a X5 just fired off... Life is about to get interesting 8)

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MAJOR SOLAR FLARE: Earth-orbiting satellites have just detected an X5-class solar flare from big sunspot AR1429. The blast peaked on March 7th at 00:28 UT. Radiation storms and radio blackouts are possible. Solar flare alerts: text, phone.


8)   (Mr Burns moment: ...excellent...)
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