• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • NEWS:
  • SatNews
  • SatMagazine
  • MilSatMagazine
  • SmallSat News
  • |     EVENTS:
  • SmallSat Symposium
  • Satellite Innovation
  • MilSat Symposium
  • SmallSat Europe

SatNews

Satellite Industry Intelligence Since 1983

Subscribe
  • LATEST
  • SatNews Events
  • Magazines
  • Calendar
  • Subscribe
  • Missions & Constellations
    • Exploration & Science Missions
    • In-Orbit Servicing & Orbital Operations
    • LEO Constellations
    • Mission Autonomy & Onboard Systems
    • Mission Deployments & Manifests
    • Navigation & PNT
    • SmallSat
    • Spacecraft & Payload Technology
    View All in Missions & Constellations →
    Viasat Completes ViaSat-3 Constellation with Successful Flight 3 LaunchViasat Completes ViaSat-3 Constellation with Successful Flight 3 Launch
    GMV to Lead Mission Planning for ESA’s Next-Generation Copernicus ExpansionGMV to Lead Mission Planning for ESA’s Next-Generation Copernicus Expansion
    Canada Tightens Re-entry Regulations as SpaceX Starlink Constellations DescendCanada Tightens Re-entry Regulations as SpaceX Starlink Constellations Descend
    The waiver was the policy. Thursday is the paperwork.The waiver was the policy. Thursday is the paperwork.
  • Business
    • Contracts & Commercial Deals
    • Earnings & Financial Reporting
    • Events & Conferences
    • Funding & Venture Capital
    • Market Forecasts
    • Mergers & Acquisitions
    • Personnel Moves & Appointments
    View All in Business & Finance →
    XDLINX Space Labs Inaugurates Advanced Satellite Integration Lab with ISRO LeadershipXDLINX Space Labs Inaugurates Advanced Satellite Integration Lab with ISRO Leadership
    SmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Jorge Ciccorossi, ITU Radiocommunications BureauSmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Jorge Ciccorossi, ITU Radiocommunications Bureau
    SmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Koen Willems, ST Engineering iDirect EuropeSmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Koen Willems, ST Engineering iDirect Europe
    U.S. Commercial Service to Host “Future in Orbit” Networking Event at SpaceBR 2026U.S. Commercial Service to Host “Future in Orbit” Networking Event at SpaceBR 2026
  • Defense
    • Counterspace & ASAT
    • Defense Budgets & Procurement
    • ISR & Reconnaissance
    • MILSATCOM
    • Missile Warning & Defense
    • National Security Programs
    • Space Domain Awareness
    View All in Military & Defense →
    BAE Systems Enters Production for NavGuide M-Code GPS ReceiverBAE Systems Enters Production for NavGuide M-Code GPS Receiver
    Space Force Awards $3.2 Billion in Golden Dome Contracts for Orbital Interceptor ConstellationSpace Force Awards $3.2 Billion in Golden Dome Contracts for Orbital Interceptor Constellation
    USSF Finalizes GPS III Constellation with Successful SV-10 DeploymentUSSF Finalizes GPS III Constellation with Successful SV-10 Deployment
    Meink: Space Force Programs Ready to Execute Once FY27 Budget LandsMeink: Space Force Programs Ready to Execute Once FY27 Budget Lands
  • Gov
    • Export Controls & Compliance
    • International Space Agreements
    • National Space Policy
    • Space Law & Treaties
    • Space Sustainability & Debris Policy
    • Space Traffic Management / Debris Removal
    View All in Government & Regulation →
    ESA spells out satellite benefits – and risksESA spells out satellite benefits – and risks
    SmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Tanja Masson-Zwaan, Leiden UniversitySmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Tanja Masson-Zwaan, Leiden University
    How CubeSat Proliferation is Redefining Sovereignty and Diplomatic Leverage at the United NationsHow CubeSat Proliferation is Redefining Sovereignty and Diplomatic Leverage at the United Nations
    FCC Modernization of Spectrum Rules Unlocks Sevenfold Gain in Satellite CapacityFCC Modernization of Spectrum Rules Unlocks Sevenfold Gain in Satellite Capacity
  • Launch
    • Launch Providers
    • Launch Schedule & Calendars
    • Launch Sites & Infrastructure
    • Rocket Technology & Vehicles
    View All in Launch →
    FAA Grounds Blue Origin Following New Glenn Upper Stage Failure and Facility AnomalyFAA Grounds Blue Origin Following New Glenn Upper Stage Failure and Facility Anomaly
    NanoAvionics to Launch Trio of Milestone Payloads on SpaceX CAS500-2 MissionNanoAvionics to Launch Trio of Milestone Payloads on SpaceX CAS500-2 Mission
    Astrobotic Achieves Record 300-Second Burn with New Detonation EngineAstrobotic Achieves Record 300-Second Burn with New Detonation Engine
    Bad news, but good news followedBad news, but good news followed
  • Software
    • Autonomous Ground Operations
    • Data Processing & AI/ML
    • Digital Twins & Modeling
    • Ground Segment & Teleports
    • Mission Planning & Simulation
    • Space Systems Software Engineering
    • Spectrum & Licensing
    View All in Software Automation & Ground Systems →
    Global Invacom Secures Exclusive Worldwide Distribution for Prodelin Antenna RangeGlobal Invacom Secures Exclusive Worldwide Distribution for Prodelin Antenna Range
    SmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Giovanni Pandolfi Bortoletto, Leaf SpaceSmallSat Europe Speaker Focus: Giovanni Pandolfi Bortoletto, Leaf Space
    SpinLaunch Selects Equinix to Deploy Global Ground Infrastructure for Meridian Space ConstellationSpinLaunch Selects Equinix to Deploy Global Ground Infrastructure for Meridian Space Constellation
    RF-Design Launches FiberLink CompactLine FCLR1811S4 for Ground Segment OptimizationRF-Design Launches FiberLink CompactLine FCLR1811S4 for Ground Segment Optimization
  • Services & Apps
    • Climate & Environmental Monitoring
    • Disaster Response & Security Mapping
    • Earth Observation & Imaging
    • Maritime & Aviation Satcom
    • Satellite Communications
    View All in Services & Applications →
    Solstar Confirms Successful On-Orbit Operation of Deke Space Communicator Following Launch on SpaceX Transporter-16 MissionSolstar Confirms Successful On-Orbit Operation of Deke Space Communicator Following Launch on SpaceX Transporter-16 Mission
    IEC Telecom Unveils Voucher-Based Connectivity Solution at Singapore Maritime Week 2026IEC Telecom Unveils Voucher-Based Connectivity Solution at Singapore Maritime Week 2026
    GomSpace and STETMAN Establish UASAT Joint Venture for Ukrainian Sovereign CommunicationsGomSpace and STETMAN Establish UASAT Joint Venture for Ukrainian Sovereign Communications
    Market Dynamics and Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN) ChipsetsMarket Dynamics and Non-Terrestrial Network (NTN) Chipsets

NASA’S Parker Probe Reveals New Solar Oddities

December 11, 2019

The closest-ever look inside the sun’s corona has unveiled an unexpectedly chaotic world, according to researchers from NASA’s Parker Solar Probe mission.

That world includes rogue plasma waves, flipping magnetic fields, and distant solar winds under the thrall of the sun’s rotation.

The findings, part of the first wave of results from the spacecraft that launched in August 2018, provide important insights into two fundamental questions the mission aimed to answer: Why does the sun’s corona get hotter as your move further away from the surface? And what accelerates the solar wind—an outward stream of protons, electrons, and other particles emanating from the corona?


An image taken from Parker Solar Probe’s WISPR (Wide-field Imager for Solar Probe) instrument shows a coronal streamer structure. (Credit: NASA)

Both questions have ramifications for how we predict, detect, and prepare for solar storms and coronal mass ejections that can have dramatic impacts on Earth’s power grid and on astronauts.

“Even with just these first orbits, we’ve been shocked by how different the corona is when observed up close,” says Justin Kasper, a professor of climate and space sciences and engineering at the University of Michigan who serves as principal investigator for Parker’s Solar Wind Electrons Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) instrument suite.

“These observations will fundamentally change our understanding of the sun and the solar wind and our ability to forecast space weather events.”

Four papers in Nature outline the findings from data collected during the spacecraft’s first two encounters with the sun. Kasper led one of the studies and is coauthor of two others (one, two).

The papers describe Parker’s unprecedented near-sun observations through two record-breaking close flybys, which exposed the spacecraft to intense heat and radiation. They reveal new insights into the processes that drive the solar wind—the constant outflow of hot, ionized gas that streams outward from the sun and fills up the solar system—and how the solar wind couples with the sun’s rotation.

Through these flybys, the mission also has examined the dust in the environment of the sun’s atmosphere, or corona, and spotted particle acceleration events so small that they are undetectable from Earth, which is nearly 93 million miles from the sun.

During its initial flybys, Parker studied the sun from a distance of about 15 million miles. That is already closer to the sun than Mercury, but the spacecraft will get even closer in the future, as it travels at more than 213,000 mph, faster than any previous spacecraft.

THE PARKER PROBE SHEDS LIGHT ON SOLAR WIND

Among the findings are new understandings of how the sun’s constant outflow of solar wind behaves. Seen near Earth, the solar wind plasma appears to be a relatively uniform flow—one that can interact with our planet’s natural magnetic field and cause space weather effects that interfere with technology. Instead of that flow, near the sun, Parker’s observations reveal a dynamic and highly structured system.

For the first time, scientists are able to study the solar wind from its source, the corona, similar to how one might observe the stream that serves as the source of a river. This provides a much different perspective as compared to studying the solar wind were its flow impacts Earth.

“By the time it gets to Earth, the solar wind is relatively smooth and well behaved, but close to the sun, it appears to be much more dynamic,” says coauthor Kristopher Klein, an assistant professor in the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory at the University of Arizona. “These local measurements of the solar wind represent the first steps into the region where the solar wind is still quite choppy and hasn’t been smoothed out yet.”

The spacecraft revealed that the sun’s rotation affects the solar wind much farther away than previously thought. Researchers knew that close in, the sun’s magnetic field pulls the wind in the same direction as the star’s rotation. Farther from the sun, at the distance the spacecraft measured in these first encounters, they had expected to see, at most, a weak signature of that rotation.

“To our great surprise, as we neared the sun, we’ve already detected large rotational flows—10 to 20 times greater than what standard models of the sun predict,” Kasper says. “So we are missing something fundamental about the sun, and how the solar wind escapes.

“This has huge implications. Space weather forecasting will need to account for these flows if we are going to be able to predict whether a coronal mass ejection will strike Earth, or astronauts heading to the moon or Mars,” Kasper says.

THE SUN’S MAGNETIC FIELD

Parker Solar Probe’s findings regarding the sun’s magnetic field—which is believed to play a role in the coronal heating mystery—were equally surprising. From Earth’s vantage point, researchers detected magnetic oscillations called “Alfvén waves” in the solar wind long ago. Some researchers thought they may be remnants of whatever mechanism caused the heating phenomenon.

Parker researchers were on the lookout for indications that might be the case, but found something unexpected.

“When you get closer to the sun, you start seeing these ‘rogue’ Alfvén waves that have four times the energy than the regular waves around them,” Kasper says. “They feature 300,000 mph velocity spikes that are so strong, they actually flip the direction of the magnetic field.”

Those polarity-reversing velocity spikes offer another potential candidate for what may cause the corona to get hotter moving away from the sun.

“All of this new information from Parker Solar Probe will cause a fundamental rethinking of how the magnetic field of the sun behaves and is coupled to the acceleration of the solar wind,” says Lennard Fisk, professor of climate and space sciences and engineering.

“This is the closest we have ever observed a coronal-mass-ejection related energetic particle event,”  and member of the ISʘIS instrument team. “Parker was about 50 solar radii from the sun at the time.

“We are observing the sun’s outer atmosphere where we never have before,” says Joe Giacalone, a professor at the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory. “This is exciting. Much of what we have seen was not expected. These initial observations still require some interpretation, which will help us better understand how the sun—and, by extension, other stars—work.”

From Futurity.org

Filed Under: Exploration & Science Missions

Primary Sidebar

Coverage

  • Missions & Constellations
  • Business & Finance
  • Military & Defense
  • Launch
  • Software Automation & Ground Systems
  • Government & Regulation
  • Services & Applications

Most Read Stories

  • Planet Labs Imposes Indefinite Blackout on Iran Satellite Imagery at U.S. Request
  • What the SpaceX IPO Changes for Every Satellite Operator
  • Russia Replaces Starlink With European-Built Satellites
  • The Downlink Deficit: The Pentagon's Optical Mesh Network and the Terrestrial Bottleneck
  • NASA Shuts Off Instrument on Voyager 1 to Extend Interstellar Mission

Secondary Sidebar

Footer

 

Satnews is a leading provider of satellite news, events, publications, research and other satellite industry information in both commercial and military enterprises worldwide.

Stories By Category

  • Business & Finance
  • Government & Regulation
  • Launch
  • Military & Defense
  • Missions & Constellations
  • Services & Applications
  • Software Automation & Ground Systems
  • Spectrum & Licensing
  • Startups & NewSpace Business

About Us

  • Leadership & Editorial Team
  • SatNews History
  • Free Satnews Subscription
  • SatNews Events
  • Magazines

Navigation

  • Latest Stories
  • Magazines
  • Events
  • Contact
  • Cookie & Privacy Policy for Satnews

We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website. If you continue to use this site we will assume that you are happy with it.
x
Sign up Now (For Free)
Access daily or weekly satellite news updates covering all aspects of the commercial and military satellite industry.
Invalid email address
Notify Me Regarding ( At least one ):
We value your privacy and will not sell or share your email or other information with any other company. You may also unsubscribe at anytime.

Click Here to see our full privacy policy.
Thanks for subscribing!