CHAPTER 8 | THE SUN 157
Historical records show that there were very few sunspots
from about 1645 to 1715, a phenomenon known as the
Maunder minimum. This coincides with a period called the “little
ice age,” a period of unusually cool weather in Europe and North
America from about 1500 to about 1850, as shown in the graph at
left. Other such periods of cooler climate are known. The evidence
suggests that there is a link between solar activity and the amount
of solar energy Earth receives. This link has been confirmed by
measurements made by spacecraft above Earth’s atmosphere.
Far-UV image
Visual
M. Seeds
NASA/TRACE
J. Harvey/NSO and HAO/NCAR
AURA/NOAO/NSF
Simultaneous images
1650 1700 1800
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
1750 1850 1900 1950 2000
Year
Number of sunspots
4
3
3a Images of the sun above show that sunspots contain magnetic fields a few thousand times stronger than Earth’s. The strong fields are believed to inhibit gas
motion below the photosphere; consequently, convection is reduced below the sunspot,
and the surface there is cooler. Heat prevented from emerging through the sunspot is
deflected and emerges around the sunspot, which can be detected in ultraviolet and
infrared images.
Ultraviolet filtergram
Simultaneous images
Magnetic image
Astronomers can measure magnetic
fields on the sun using the Zeeman effect
as shown below. When an atom is in a magnetic
field, the electron orbits are altered, and the
atom is able to absorb a number of different
wavelength photons even though it was
originally limited to a single wavelength. In the
spectrum, you see single lines split into multiple
components, with the separation between the
components proportional to the strength of the
magnetic field.
Magnetic fields can reveal themselves
by their shape. For example, iron
filings sprinkled over a bar magnet
reveal an arched shape.
The complexity of an active
region becomes visible at
short wavelengths.
Visual-wavelength image
Visual
Slit allows light
from sunspot to
enter spectrograph.
Sunspot
groups
Magnetic fields around
sunspot groups
Spectral line split
by Zeeman effect
Winter severity in
London and Paris
Warm
Cold
Maunder minimum
few spots colder
winters Warmer
winters
SOHO/EIT, ESA and NASA
Far -UV imageFar -UV image
(^5) nonvisible wave- Observations at
lengths reveal that the
chromosphere and corona
above sunspots are
violently disturbed in
what astronomers
callactive regions.
Spectrographic
observations show
that active regions
contain powerful
magnetic fields.
Arched structures
above an active
region are
evidence of gas
trapped in magnetic
fields.