Astronomers find solar
storms behave like supernovae
Researchers have
studied the behaviour of the Sun's coronal mass ejections, explaining for the
first time the details of how these huge eruptions behave as they fall back
onto the Sun's surface. In the process, they have discovered that coronal mass
ejections have a surprising twin in the depths of space: the tendrils of gas in
the Crab Nebula, which lie 6500 light-years away and are millions of times
larger.
Researchers at
UCL have studied the behaviour of the Sun's coronal mass ejections, explaining
for the first time the details of how these huge eruptions behave as they fall
back onto the Sun's surface. In the process, they have discovered that coronal
mass ejections have a surprising twin in the depths of space: the tendrils of
gas in the Crab Nebula, which lie 6500 light-years away and are millions of
times larger.
On 7 June 2011, the biggest ejection of material
ever observed erupted from the surface of the Sun. Over the days that followed,
the plasma belched out by the Sun made its way out into space. But most of the
material propelled up from the Sun's surface quickly fell back towards our
star's surface.
For the solar physicists at UCL's Mullard Space
Science Laboratory, watching these solar fireworks was a unique opportunity to
study how solar plasma behaves.
"We've known for a long time that the Sun has
a magnetic field, like the Earth does. But in places it's far too weak for us
to measure, unless we have something falling through it. The blobs of plasma
that rained down from this beautiful explosion were the gift we'd been waiting
for," says David Williams, one of the study's authors.
Since 2010, the NASA Solar Dynamics Observatory
(SDO) has been constantly photographing the surface of the Sun. To our eyes,
our star seems almost unchanging, with occasional fleeting sunspots the only
changes that can be seen without special apparatus. But the SDO's instruments
can cut through the dazzling brightness, magnify the detail and see wavelengths
of light which are blocked by the Earth's atmosphere. This combination of
high-quality imaging and constant monitoring means that scientists can now see
the detail of how the Sun's dynamic surface changes over time.
The 7 June 2011 eruption was by some margin the
biggest recorded since this constant monitoring began, meaning the huge cascade
of matter that fell back into the Sun following the eruption was a unique
opportunity to study, on an unusually large scale, the fluid dynamics of these
phenomena.
"We noticed that the shape of the plume of
plasma was quite particular," says Jack Carlyle, lead author of the study.
"As it fell into the Sun, it repeatedly split apart like drops of ink
falling through water, with fingers of material branching out. It didn't stick
together. It's a great example of an effect where light and heavy fluids
mix."
Less dense materials typically float on top of
denser ones without mixing together, for example oil sitting on water, or
layers of different liqueurs in a cocktail. Change the order by putting the
denser fluid on top, however, and the denser one will quickly fall through the
less-dense one until their positions are reversed.
The complex
pattern formed by the denser fluid as it repeatedly splits and branches into
ever-finer 'fingers' of matter, is caused by a phenomenon known as the
Rayleigh-Taylor instability.
The team noticed in SDO's high-resolution images
that the falling plasma clearly underwent the Rayleigh-Taylor instability as it
returned to the Sun's surface. This is as would be expected -- the solar plasma
is denser than the solar atmosphere it is falling through. In space, a similar
effect has been observed before, albeit on a much larger scale, in the Crab
Nebula.
The Crab Nebula is the remnant of a supernova which
exploded in the 10th century. In the millennium that has followed the
explosion, denser matter has started to fall back into the centre of the
nebula, exhibiting the same finger-like structures as the team observed in the
Sun.
A major study of the Crab Nebula in 1996 found that
the Rayleigh-Taylor instability in the Crab Nebula was actually slightly
modified. The highly magnetised environment in the nebula changes the
proportions of the fingers, making them fatter than they would be otherwise.
The UCL team found that the same effect was going
on in the 7 June 2011 coronal mass ejection: even in an area where the Sun's
magnetic field was weak, it was modifying the Rayleigh-Taylor effect, changing
the shape of the plume of plasma as it fell back into the Sun.This is the most
spectacular example of the effect ever observed on the Sun.
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