Parker Solar Probe and the curious case of the hot corona

Parker Solar Probe and the curious case of the hot corona

6 years ago
Anonymous $dicfOfy7s2

https://phys.org/news/2018-07-parker-solar-probe-curious-case.html

From Earth, as we see it in visible light, the Sun's appearance—quiet, unchanging—belies the life and drama of our nearest star. Its turbulent surface is rocked by eruptions and intense bursts of radiation, which hurl solar material at incredible speeds to every corner of the solar system. This solar activity can trigger space weather events that have the potential to disrupt radio communications, harm satellites and astronauts, and at their most severe, interfere with power grids.

Above the surface, the corona extends for millions of miles and roils with plasma, gases superheated so much that they separate into an electric flow of ions and free electrons. Eventually, it continues outward as the solar wind, a supersonic stream of plasma permeating the entire solar system. And so, it is that humans live well within the extended atmosphere of our Sun. To fully understand the corona and all its secrets is to understand not only the star that powers life on Earth, but also, the very space around us.