NASA findings brighten up Sun like never before
NASA findings brighten up Sun like never before
The new findings by NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) reveal a region of the Sun more complicated than previously thought.

Washington: New findings by NASA spacecraft about how the Sun's atmosphere or corona or what causes solar winds that can impact technological infrastructure in space and on Earth has given the scientific community an unprecedented amount of information about our Sun.

The new findings by NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) reveal a region of the Sun more complicated than previously thought.

"Combining IRIS data with observations from other missions is enabling breakthroughs in our understanding of the sun and its interactions with the solar system," said Jeff Newmark, interim director for the Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington, DC.

The first result identified heat pockets of 111,093 degrees Celsius, lower in the solar atmosphere than ever observed by previous spacecraft.

IRIS also observed numerous, small, low-lying loops of solar material in the interface region for the first time.

"The unprecedented resolution provided by IRIS will enable scientists to better understand how the solar atmosphere is energised," Newmark added.

A surprise to researchers was the third finding of IRIS observations showing structures resembling mini-tornadoes occurring in solar active regions for the first time.

These tornadoes move at speeds as fast as 12 miles per second and are scattered throughout the chromosphere, or the layer of the sun in the interface region just above the surface.

Another finding uncovers evidence of high-speed jets at the root of the solar wind.

"The jets are fountains of plasma that shoot out of coronal holes, areas of less dense material in the solar atmosphere and are typically thought to be a source of the solar wind," Newmark pointed out.

The final result highlights the effects of nanoflares throughout the corona.

"Large solar flares are initiated by a mechanism called magnetic reconnection, whereby magnetic field lines cross and explosively realign. These often send particles out into space at nearly the speed of light," researchers emphasised.

The new information will help researchers better understand how our nearest star transfers energy through its atmosphere and track the dynamic solar activity, concluded the study that appeared in the journal Science.

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