2 solar probes are helping researchers understand what phenomenon powers the solar wind
Published: August 29, 2024 2:13pm EDT
Our Sun drives a constant outward flow of plasma, or ionized gas, called the solar wind, which envelops our solar system. Outside of Earths protective magnetosphere, the fastest solar wind rushes by at speeds of over 310 miles (500 kilometers) per second. But researchers havent been able to figure out how the wind gets enough energy to achieve that speed until now.
Our team of heliophysicists published a paper in August 2024 that points to a new source of energy propelling the solar wind.
Solar wind discovery
Physicist Eugene Parker predicted the solar winds existence in 1958. The Mariner spacecraft, headed to Venus, would confirm its existence in 1962.
Since the 1940s, studies had shown that the Suns corona, or solar atmosphere, could heat up to very high temperatures over 2 million degrees Fahrenheit (or more than 1 million degrees Celsius).
Parkers work suggested that this extreme temperature could create an outward thermal pressure strong enough to overcome gravity and cause the outer layer of the Suns atmosphere to escape.
More:
https://theconversation.com/2-solar-probes-are-helping-researchers-understand-what-phenomenon-powers-the-solar-wind-235286