Source of the Slow Solar Wind Found (Video)
MIL/UT, Apr 3, 2008. Author:


April 3, 2008 - The solar wind comes in two modes: fast and slow. Solar astronomers have a good idea as to where the fast solar wind comes from: polar coronal holes of open magnetic field lines, blasting solar particles at speeds of over 3 million km/hr. But what about the slow solar wind which fires particles into space at a pedestrian 1.5 million km/hr? We know it comes from the streamer belt above equatorial regions of the Sun, but we have never been able to look lower.

But now, with the help of the Hinode observatory, stunning high-resolution images and video have been captured showing solar dynamics previously overlooked. The point at which the Sun ejects slow wind particles into space can now be studied in unparalleled detail to help us understand the dynamics of space weather and solar storms.

The Sun is a complex, magnetic body. Its magnetic field is highly dynamic, varying in activity throughout the 11-year solar cycle. We have just witnessed the Sun entering "Solar Cycle 24" (although some old sunspots from the previous cycle have just been seen) and it will gradually build in energy before reaching "solar maximum" in a few years time (looks like the solar storms will be bigger than 2003's flare excitement).
This time of relative calm (known as "solar minimum") allows solar physicists to study the less explosive dynamics in the lower corona (the Sun's atmosphere),

chromosphere and photosphere. It is in this region that magnetic field lines (or magnetic flux) are pushed through the photosphere and the plasma from the solar interior is guided by the magnetic flux high into the corona. These hot and bright arcs of magnetism and superheated plasma are known as coronal loops, the scene of rapid reconnection events, sometimes sparking flares and coronal mass ejections (CMEs). But this time the Hinode science team have observed a steady release of solar plasma, venting from the solar interior around a cluster of bright coronal loop footpoints. The location of this steady release of plasma forms the origin of the slow solar wind.

"It is fantastic to finally be able to pinpoint the source of the solar wind - it has been debated for many years and now we have the final piece of the jigsaw. In the future we want to be able to work out how the wind is transported through the solar system." - Prof. Louise Harra, University College London, Mullard Space Science Laboratory.

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