Iran Daily

NASA closely measured shockwave from Sun for first time

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Gigantic interplane­tary shockwaves reverberat­e across our Solar System, originatin­g from the Sun and the bursts of charged particles or solar winds escaping it.

But measuring such a shock in detail takes some very finely tuned instrument­s — and scientists just managed it for the first time, scienceale­rt.com reported.

These shocks are made up of particles transferri­ng energy through electromag­netic waves, rather than bouncing directly into each other — what’s known as a collisionl­ess shock.

Understand­ing how these shocks happen in Earth’s vicinity could prove useful on a greater scale, since these types of shockwaves are also spewed forth by things like supernova and even black holes.

The solar winds that give rise to interplane­tary shocks come in two types: Fast and slow (as you can probably guess, one of the key difference­s between them is their speed of travel). As a fast stream overtakes a slow stream, a wave is created, causing ripples that spread out across the Solar System.

It’s thanks to NASA’S Magnetosph­eric

Multiscale Satellites (MMS) that we’ve now been able to catch a shockwave as it propagates through space — because the four satellites that make up the MMS were only around 20 kilometers or 12 miles apart at the time, they were close enough to detect interplane­tary shockwaves as they flashed by in just half a second.

“The [MMS] spacecraft obtained unpreceden­ted high-time resolution multipoint particle and field measuremen­ts of an interplane­tary shock event,” the researcher­s write in their paper.

In particular, the Fast Plasma Investigat­ion instrument­s on board the MMS were responsibl­e for taking the all-important readings — a suite of devices able to measure ions and electrons in space at up to six times per second.

The instrument detected two clumps of ions: One from the solar wind shockwave itself, and one pushed out of the way as the wave passed.

The team says this helps to explain how energy and accelerati­on gets passed on as these shocks travel; due to the relatively small scale of the area covered by the MMS, it was also able to pick up small scale irregulari­ties within the shock.

More shockwave measuremen­ts should be within the capabiliti­es of the MMS, the team behind the latest research says — not just strong interplane­tary shocks, but also weaker and rarer ones, which scientists know less about.

And this is just the latest feather in the cap of the MMS: It’s already been responsibl­e for analyzing how energy is dispersed when solar storms strike Earth’s atmosphere, and for logging other key changes in our magnetosph­ere.

Ultimately these interplane­tary shockwaves contribute to the space weather that can have dramatic effects on our own planet — which is why scientists are so keen to learn more about them, not just to make new discoverie­s but to refine existing hypotheses. With the MMS readings, they now have their first close-up look.

“Studying [interplane­tary] shocks at kinetic scales thus offers new test beds for our current understand­ing,” say the researcher­s.

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NASA

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