Saturday, January 31, 2026

 SPACE/COSMOS

Kissing the sun: Unraveling mysteries of the solar wind



A University of Arizona-led research team has measured the dynamics and ever-changing "shell" of hot gas from where the solar wind originates. 



University of Arizona

Artist's concept of the boundary of the sun's atmosphere 

image: 

This artist’s concept depicts the boundary of the sun’s atmosphere that marks the point of no return for material that escapes the sun’s magnetic grasp. Deep dives through this area using NASA’s Parker Solar Probe combined with solar wind measurements from other spacecraft have allowed scientists to track the evolution of this structure throughout the solar cycle and produce a map of this previously uncharted boundary.

view more 

Credit: CfA/Melissa Weiss





Using data collected by NASA's Parker Solar Probe during its closest approach to the sun, a University of Arizona-led research team has measured the dynamics and ever-changing "shell" of hot gas from where the solar wind originates.

Published in Geophysical Research Letters, the findings not only help scientists answer fundamental questions about energy and matter moving through the heliosphere – the volume of space controlled by the sun's activity – which affects not just the Earth and moon, but all planets in the solar system, reaching far into interstellar space. These effects include significant space weather events. 

"One of the things that we care about as a technologically advancing society is how we are impacted by the sun, the star that we live with," said Kristopher Klein, associate professor in the U of A Lunar and Planetary Laboratory who led the research study. 

For example, during a coronal mass ejection, the sun flings chunks of its atmosphere – highly energetic, charged particles – out into the solar system, where they interact with Earth's magnetic field, with varying impacts on satellites, radio communications and even the radiation airplane passengers are exposed to when they fly over the poles, Klein explained. 

"If we can better understand the sun's atmosphere through which these energetic particles are moving, it improves our ability to forecast how these eruptions from the sun will actually propagate through the solar system and eventually hit and possibly impact the Earth," he said. 

While the idea of the sun having an atmosphere may seem difficult to imagine, since our star is essentially a roiling ball of plasma – hot, ionized hydrogen gas – with no appreciable surface, a century of studying its properties has led to a more nuanced picture. The core, where hydrogen undergoes nuclear fusion into helium, is the furnace driving the sun's activity, causing it to constantly radiate energy out into space. 

Several layers wrap around the core, with the outermost ones forming the sun's atmosphere. The photosphere, where sunspots are located, is surrounded by a thin "peel" known as the chromosphere, from which flares may sprout and that forms the blotchy "surface" one may see when looking at the sun through a telescope equipped with special filters to allow for safe viewing. The sun's outermost atmospheric layer, the corona, is a fuzzy halo of plasma hidden from view at all times by the star's intense brilliance except for brief moments during a total solar eclipse. 

Launched in 2018, Parker Solar Probe has approached the sun closer than any spacecraft mission before. Orbiting the sun in a complex orbit, involving seven passes by Venus, the probe reached its first closest approach on Christmas Eve 2024, and these close approaches have allowed the science team to map the sun's "outer boundary" in a way not possible until now. 

In a counterintuitive twist, as the plasma bubbles up from the sun's core, it cools from 27 million degrees to about 10,000 degrees Fahrenheit in the visible photosphere, but as it fans out into the corona, it heats up again, to temperatures in excess of 2 million degrees. 

The processes driving these strange dynamics involve complex interactions of the sun's charged particles with powerful magnetic fields that bend, twist and even snap back on themselves – with poorly understood details that have vexed heliophysicists to this day.   

"We know there's this constant heat that's being input into the solar wind, and we want to understand what mechanisms are actually leading to that heating," Klein said. "We have made simplified models, we've run computer simulations, but by launching Parker Solar Probe, and by doing these detailed calculations of the structure of the velocity distribution of the particles, we can improve those models and calculate actually how the heating occurs at these at these extremely close distances where we have never measured before."

Before sending a robotic spacecraft capable of "kissing the sun," as the Parker team has referred to the probe's closest flyby, taking it to within 3.8 million miles above the sun's surface, researchers could only describe this heating using simple models for the charged particle distributions.

"One of the pressing questions we seek to answer is how the solar wind is heated as it is accelerated from the sun's surface," he said. "With these new measurements and calculations, we're rewriting our understanding of how energy moves through the sun's outer atmosphere."

A numerical code developed by Klein's team, dubbed Arbitrary Linear Plasma Solver, or ALPS, allowed the researchers to analyze the actual measured distribution rather than using a simplified model to determine how waves move through the plasma Parker is measuring, and – importantly – how the heating changes as the particles hurtle away from the sun. At the point of no return, where the solar wind is born, they begin to cool, but much more slowly than would be expected for a gas that is simply expanding, Klein explained – a process known as damping and yet another mystery waiting to be fully understood. 

With ALPS and Parker's observations, the team can measure in detail how much energy is imparted onto the different species of charged particles in the solar wind, said Klein, explaining that this ability changes researchers' understanding of that process not just for the sun, but for all astrophysical objects involving heated plasma and magnetic fields. 

"If we can understand the damping in the solar wind, we can then apply that knowledge of energy dissipation to things like interstellar gas, accretion disks around black holes, neutron stars and other astrophysical objects." 

When taking the measurements for this study, the Parker Solar Probe, pictured here in an artist's impression, traveled at more than 427,000 miles per hour, making it the fastest human-made object in history.

Credit

NASA/APL

NASA delays Moon mission over frigid weather

By AFP
January 30, 2026


NASA is preparing to conduct key tests before its Moon rocket can blast off from Florida - Copyright AFP Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo

NASA on Friday pushed back the earliest date that astronauts could fly to the Moon, due to forecasts of freezing temperatures at the Florida launch site.

The earliest window for the moonshot will now be February 8, two days later than originally scheduled.

NASA was preparing to conduct a key fueling test over the weekend of the 322-foot (98-meter) rocket that is on the Cape Canaveral launch pad in Florida.

But large parts of the United States are grappling with severe winter weather, with Arctic air surging across the country following a deadly winter storm.

Florida is not immune: the normally sunny state could experience its lowest temperatures in decades that are forecast to hover around freezing.

“The expected weather this weekend would violate launch conditions,” NASA said in a statement.

Weather permitting, NASA crews now are aiming to conduct their final tests Monday, after which a launch date will be determined.

The change narrows the possibility that NASA can launch their Artemis 2 team of four astronauts on their Moon flyby in February — just three days of potential windows remain in that month.

The team remains in quarantine in Houston, NASA said.

Heaters are atop the Orion capsule to ensure it stays warm, the US space agency said, and purging systems are in place and configured for the colder weather to maintain proper conditions.

NASA officials are also preparing to launch a crew to the International Space Station, a mission that is being closely coordinated as it is currently planned to happen within days of a potential Artemis 2 launch.

The next NASA crew rotation to the ISS could happen as soon as February 11, but depending on the Artemis plans, it could get delayed.

“Our teams have worked very carefully to see how we can keep moving towards launch for both missions, while at the same time making sure we avoid any major conflicts,” said Ken Bowersox, an administrator at NASA’s Space Operations Mission Directorate, during a briefing Friday.

There’s a possibility that Crew-12 could get some overlapping space time with the Moon team, a prospect that ISS astronauts said Friday they’d enjoy.

“If we do launch before Artemis, we’ll be on board the International Space Station, and part of their flight plan actually involves a call to the ISS,” said Jessica Meir, the crew’s commander who said they’d be “excited” to have some intra-space conversation with their colleagues.

“We are all thrilled about the launch of Artemis. We are very excited to see how this will all play out.”

The Crew-12 team to ISS also includes Sophie Adenot, who will be the second Frenchwoman to fly to space.

In another noteworthy tidbit, the new February 8 window for a potential launch to the Moon falls on the same day as the highly watched Super Bowl, the National Football League championship.

That launch window would open at 11:20 pm in Florida (0420 GMT on February 9) — soon after the game would likely wrap.

No comments: