Scientists funded by NASA’s Living With a Star program have made a big stride forward in learning how to forecast “all clear” periods where severe space weather is unlikely. Such forecasts are important for astronauts, especially outside the Earth’s magnetic shield who are planning spacewalks, and for satellite and aircraft operators.
“We have a much better insight into what causes the strongest, most dangerous solar flares, and how to develop forecasts that can predict an ‘all clear’ for significant space weather, for longer periods,” said Dr. Karel Schrijver of the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center (ATC), Palo Alto, Calif., lead author of a paper on this research published in the Astrophysical Journal.
Insight into the causes of the largest solar flares came in two steps. “First, we discovered characteristic patterns of magnetic field evolution associated with strong electrical currents in the solar atmosphere,” said Dr. Marc DeRosa of the ATC, co-author of the paper. “It is these strong electrical currents that drive solar flares.”
Subsequently, the authors discovered that the regions most likely to flare had new magnetic field merge into them that was clearly out of alignment with the existing field. This emerging field from the solar interior appears to induce even more current as it interacts with the existing field.
The team also found that flares do not necessarily occur immediately upon the emergence of a new magnetic field. Apparently the electrical currents must build up over several hours before the fireworks start. Predicting exactly when a flare will happen is like studying avalanches. They occur only after enough snow pack has built up. However, once that threshold has been reached, the avalanche can happen anytime by processes not yet completely understood.
The researchers made the discovery by comparing data about magnetic fields on the Sun’s surface to the sharpest extreme-ultraviolet images of the solar atmosphere (corona). The magnetic maps came from the Michelson Doppler Imager (MDI) instrument on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft, and the corona images were from the Transition Region and Coronal Explorer spacecraft (TRACE). The team also used computer models of a three-dimensional solar magnetic field without electrical currents (based on SOHO images). Differences between images and models indicated the presence of large electrical currents.
“We found that the current-carrying regions flare two to three times more often than the regions without large currents,” said Schrijver. “Also, the average flare magnitude is three times greater for the group of active regions with large current systems than for the other group.”
From NASA