CHAPTER 8 | THE SUN 163
Magnetic reconnections can release enough
energy to blow large amounts of ionized gas
outward from the corona in coronal mass ejections
(CMEs). If a CME strikes Earth, it can produce
especially violent disturbances in Earth’s magnetic field.
The solar wind, enhanced by eruptions on the sun,
interacts with Earth’s magnetic field and can create
electrical currents up to a million megawatts. Those currents
flowing down into a ring around Earth’s magnetic poles excite
atoms in Earth’s upper atmosphere to emit photons
as shown below. Seen from Earth’s surface,
the gas produces glowing clouds and
curtains of aurora.
At right, waves rush outward at 50 km/sec
from the site of a solar flare 40,000 times
stronger than the 1906 San Francisco earthquake.
The biggest solar flares can be a billion times
more powerful than a hydrogen bomb.
SOHO/MDI, ESA, and NASA
NSSDC, Holzworth and Meng
Yohkoh/ISAS/NASA
Hinode JAXA/NASA
This multiwavelength
image shows a
sunspot interacting
with a neighboring
magnetic field to
produce a solar flare.
Auroras occur about 130 km
above the Earth’s surface.
Ring of aurora
around the north
magnetic pole
Coronal mass
ejection
Coronal hole
Helioseismology
image
2c X-ray image
2b
2a
3
2 Solarflaresrise to maximum in minutes and decay in an hour. They
occur in active regions where oppositely directed magnetic fields meet
and cancel each other out in what astronomers call reconnections. Energy
stored in the magnetic fields is released as short-wavelength photons and
as high-energy protons and electrons. X-ray and ultraviolet photons reach
Earth in 8 minutes and increase ionization in our atmosphere, which can
interfere with radio communications. Particles from flares reach Earth hours
or days later as gusts in the solar wind, which can distort Earth’s magnetic
field and disrupt navigation systems. Solar flares can also cause surges in
electrical power lines and damage to Earth satellites.
Much of the solar wind comes from
coronal holes,where the magnetic field
does not loop back into the sun. These open
magnetic fields allow ionized gas in the corona
to flow away as the solar wind. The dark area
in this X-ray image at right is a coronal hole.