2024

The Sun's fluffy corona in exquisite detail

Henke, Jans ; Kraaikamp, Emil ; D'Huys, Elke ; Mueller, Daniel ; Berghmans, David


Released on 2024-05-02

Abstract: This otherworldly, ever-changing landscape is what the Sun looks like up close. ESA's Solar Orbiter filmed the transition from the Sun's lower atmosphere to the much hotter outer corona. The hair-like structures are made of charged gas (plasma), following magnetic field lines emerging from the Sun's interior. The brightest regions are around one million degrees Celsius, while cooler material looks dark as it absorbs radiation. This video was recorded on 27 September 2023 by the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) instrument on Solar Orbiter. At the time, the spacecraft was at roughly a third of the Earth’s distance from the Sun, heading for a closest approach of 43 million km on 7 October. On the same day that this video was recorded, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe skimmed just 7.26 million km from the solar surface. Rather than directly imaging the Sun, Parker measures particles and the magnetic field in the Sun’s corona and in the solar wind. This was a perfect opportunity for the two missions to team up, with ESA-led Solar Orbiter’s remote-sensing instruments observing the source region of the solar wind that would subsequently flow past Parker Solar Probe.

Keyword(s): Solar Orbiter ; EUI ; corona
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The record appears in these collections:
Royal Observatory of Belgium > Solar Physics & Space Weather (SIDC)
Outreach > Press Releases
Solar-Terrestrial Centre of Excellence

 Record created 2024-05-06, last modified 2024-05-06