| EMBARGOED
UNTIL DECEMBER 10, 2003 11 A.M. PACIFIC (2 P.M. ET)
UCSD PHYSICISTS SEE SOLAR ELECTRONS,
AURORAS
ASSOCIATED WITH RECENT GEOMAGNETIC STORMS
By Kim McDonald
Using an orbiting camera designed to block the light from
the sun and stars, an international team of solar physicists
has been able for the first time to directly image clouds of
electrons surrounding Earth that travel from the sun during
periods of solar flare activity.
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| Photo sequence
from top left to bottom right showing high energy electrons
in yellow and red approaching Earth. Sun is at the center
of the photo. |
These electron clouds, a part of the solar atmosphere that
extends millions of miles from the sun, cause geomagnetic storms
that can disrupt communications satellites, expose high-flying
aircraft to excess radiation and even damage ground-based power-generating
facilities.
The images taken by this new camera, which will be discussed
at a scientific session and news conference at the fall meeting
in San Francisco of the American Geophysical Union, should allow
space weather forecasters to substantially improve their predictions
of geomagnetic storms.
“Until now, we didn’t have a good way to view
the clouds of electrons that pass Earth from coronal mass ejections,”
said Bernard V. Jackson, a solar physicist at the University
of California, San Diego. “We are living inside the solar
atmosphere, but up until now had no way to view it, so space
forecasters couldn’t be certain whether an ejection from
the sun would affect the Earth one to five days later or harmlessly
pass us by. Now that we can see these clouds as they travel
through space outward from the sun, we can map their trajectories.”
The orbiting camera, known as the Solar Mass Ejection
Imager, was built by scientists and engineers at UCSD, the Air
Force Research Laboratory, University of Birmingham in the United
Kingdom, Boston College and Boston University. The instrument
was launched in January by the Air Force and has provided the
team of scientists with numerous images of coronal mass ejections,
which can be seen in the images because of the faint scattering
of sunlight from the clouds of electrons.
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| High
altitude aurora is seen as bright light in the center of
these sequential images taken two minutes apart. |
To the surprise of the scientists, the images also revealed
the existence of high-altitude auroras, extending more than
500 miles above the Earth’s surface. Such auroras had
previously been reported by space-shuttle astronauts, but their
observations were questioned because air molecules were not
thought to exist in sufficient quantity at that altitude to
produce such light displays.
Bright auroras seen from the surface of our planet in
the high northern and southern latitudes are caused by pulses
of charged particles, mostly electrons, from the sun that overload
the Earth’s lower radiation belt and are discharged into
the atmosphere, colliding with air molecules in the atmosphere
in shimmering displays of colorful light known as the northern
(or southern) lights. Auroras typically extend from 60 miles
above Earth’s surface to several hundred miles. But at
500 miles above the Earth’s surface, the density of air
molecules is not enough to permit auroras—or so scientists
have long believed.
“It’s a mystery,” said Jackson of UCSD’s
Center for Astrophysics and Space Sciences. “This is far
higher than anyone had ever expected. It may be that nitrogen
from the ionosphere is ejected into the higher altitudes during
a coronal mass ejection.”
The auroras were first noted by Andrew Buffington, another
UCSD solar physicist, while combing through data taken by the
Solar Mass Ejection Imager. In a series of image frames taken
four seconds apart during a coronal mass ejection in late May,
Buffington detected a bright source of light, 100 times brighter
than the scattering of sunlight from the electrons. Similar
sequences were seen during subsequent mass ejections by Buffington
and Boston College scientists Don Mizuno and Dave Webb.
“We’ve observed high-altitude auroras during
all of the coronal mass ejection events that engulfed Earth
since the instrument became operational,” says Jackson.
“In fact, the last big event in late October had a lot
of auroras associated with it. But we still don’t understand
the process that is causing them.”
He said researchers at the Air Force Research Laboratory
are presently studying the data to come up with some possible
explanations. The project was financed by the U.S. Air Force,
National Aeronautics and Space Administration, National Science
Foundation and the University of Birmingham.
Comment: Bernard
Jackson (858) 534-3358
Media Contact: Kim
McDonald (858) 534-7572
AGU Press Room (415)
348-4440
Photos and
movies of electron clouds and high-altitude aurora
Credit: UCSD, AFRL
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