The Guardian (USA)

Closest ever images of sun reveal it is covered in miniature flares

- Hannah Devlin Science correspond­ent

The closest ever images of the sun reveal its surface is speckled with “campfires”, miniature versions of the dramatic solar flares visible from Earth.

The observatio­ns, beamed back from the Solar Orbiter spacecraft, which is a joint Nasa and European Space Agency (ESA) mission, could help resolve why the sun’s atmosphere is so staggering­ly hot compared to the surface – a central paradox in solar physics. Miniature flares have been proposed as a theoretica­l explanatio­n for the so-called coronal heating problem, but until now no telescope has had a good enough resolution to observe the sun’s atmosphere in sufficient detail.

The latest footage, taken at 77m kilometres (48m miles) above the solar surface between the orbits of Venus and Mercury, reveals flickering beacons, each spanning just a few hundred kilometres across and lasting minutes, before fizzling out again.

“The campfires are little relatives of the solar flares that we can observe from Earth, million or billion times smaller,” said David Berghmans of the Royal Observator­y of Belgium, a principal investigat­or on the mission. “The sun might look quiet at the first glance, but when we look in detail, we can see those miniature flares everywhere we look.”

The $1.3bn mission was launched in February and will ultimately provide the first glimpses of the sun’s uncharted north and south poles when the probe reaches a vantage point above the planetary plane late next year.

As it moves closer to the sun, the spacecraft will be exposed to scorching temperatur­es, requiring its camera and other instrument­s to be housed behind a titanium heat shield coated in a substance called SolarBlack, made from charred animal bones. The instrument­s and camera peer through peepholes that shut whenever there is a risk of them overheatin­g.

The latest images show what is happening in the lower layers of the sun’s atmosphere, known as the corona, that extends millions of kilometres into outer space. The coronal temperatur­e is more than a million degrees Celsius, orders of magnitude hotter than the surface of the sun, which is a relatively cool 5,500C. Solar physicists have been trying for decades to resolve the mystery of why the corona is quite so hot.

“One of the theories is that you have all these really small solar flares

going off all the time all over the sun,” said David Long of UCL’s Mullard Space Science Laboratory, a principal investigat­or on the mission. “What we’re seeing in these images are there are very small brightenin­gs going off all over the sun.”

It is possible that the flares could provide enough energy to heat up the corona to its observed extreme temperatur­e. Further observatio­ns and analysis are needed to confirm whether this is the case.

Solar Orbiter is now on a tour of the inner solar system on the far side of the sun, meaning it is out of everyday contact with the Earth. That will bring it into an orbit about 42m kilometres from the sun over the next two years. By 2025, its orbit will have an inclinatio­n of 17° – high enough to take images of the sun’s poles – and if the mission is extended it could reach an inclinatio­n of 33°. Mission scientists say that observatio­ns of the poles could reveal the processes driving the Sun’s 11-year cycle of activity.

• This article was amended on 16 July to correct the date when the Solar Orbiter’s incline would allow it to take images of the sun’s poles.

 ?? Photograph: Solar Orbiter/EUI team handout/EPA ?? The images were beamed back from the Solar Orbiter spacecraft, at about 77m kilometres away from the solar surface.
Photograph: Solar Orbiter/EUI team handout/EPA The images were beamed back from the Solar Orbiter spacecraft, at about 77m kilometres away from the solar surface.
 ?? Photograph: ESA/ATG medialab/Na ?? An artist’s impression of the Solar Orbiter.
Photograph: ESA/ATG medialab/Na An artist’s impression of the Solar Orbiter.

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