The Press

Telescope gives most detailed images of our sun

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All is not calm on the sun. New images released last week, which the National Science Foundation says are the star’s most detailed close-ups, show turbulent solar plasma: Charged particles that rise to the surface of the star, forming convection cells the size of Texas, which cool and descend back into the sun’s depths.

The images, from the nearly complete Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, are the most zoomedin examinatio­ns of that turbulence. They reveal structures as small as 30km on the surface of the sun. Those details are five times smaller than any solar image had captured before, Thomas Rimmele, the telescope’s director, told reporters. (The sun is nearly 1.4 million kilometres in diameter.)

The Inouye telescope, a US$344 million (NZ$532m) tool built on the peak of Haleakala on Maui, took these images on its first day of operation in December. This is the ‘‘largest, most powerful solar telescope in the world,’’ Rimmele said.

The telescope will astronomer­s understand help

the sun’s magnetic field and its atmosphere, known as its corona, more fully.

From its violent atmosphere, the sun belches energetic particles that move so swiftly that they are able to hit Earth in minutes. Such solar storms are capable of overwhelmi­ng electric grids and disturbing radio communicat­ions.

‘‘We still do not understand how the corona is heated to millions of degrees when the surface of the sun is only 6,000 degrees,’’ Rimmele said. (If that phenomenon sounds counterint­uitive, well, it is. Solar experts often describe the effect like this: Imagine pulling your hand away from a hot plate, only for your palm more.)

‘‘The Inouye telescope has the unique resolution and sensitivit­y required to perform the most precise measuremen­ts of the sun’s magnetic field, especially in the corona,’’ he said.

The telescope is a marvel of engineerin­g.

A mirror within the telescope adjusts 2,000 times per second, to compensate for distortion­s introduced by Earth’s atmosphere. As the telescope focuses on the sun, it generates heat – in the manner of a magnifying glass, except it gets hot enough to melt metal, Rimmele said. Coolant fed through 12km of pipe keeps the telescope chilled.

to heat up even

‘‘We make the equivalent of a swimming pool full of ice every night to provide cooling for the optics and structures during the day,’’ he said.

The constructi­on at Haleakala was the target of protesters, who said the telescope was on sacred land. Twenty people were arrested there while attempting to block trucks from the summit in summer 2015. Protests have continued at another Hawaiian mountain, Mauna Kea, where constructi­on of the Thirty Meter Telescope was put on hold in December.

At Haleakala, after ‘‘semiannual meetings with a native Hawaiian working group,’’ telescope officials were ‘‘able to smooth over a lot of that contention,’’ said David Boboltz, program director for the NSF’s astronomy division. Under an agreement, 2 per cent of the telescope time will be allocated to native Hawaiian scientists.

A new wave of solar astronomy is forming, which includes observatio­n platforms in space. The Parker Solar Probe, which launched in August 2018, has been skimming by the sun to collect temperatur­e and other data. The European Space Agency plans to launch its solar orbiter in February. The Inouye telescope will be finished in June, while the astronomer­s prep to catch the next hot spot cycle on the sun.

 ??  ?? New images of the sun by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope show how charged particles rise to the surface of the star, forming convection cells the size of Texas.
New images of the sun by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope show how charged particles rise to the surface of the star, forming convection cells the size of Texas.

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