A Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) scientist has employed instruments aboard NASA’s Parker Solar Probe to identify a new source of energetic particles near the sun as the spacecraft dipped in and out of the solar corona. Parker was reportedly able to make these measurements due to its record-breaking proximity to the sun, flying through its corona up to three times a year.
Parker Solar Probe
The Parker Solar Probe was developed as part of NASA’s Living With a Star program to explore aspects of the sun-Earth system that directly affect life and society. The Living With a Star program is managed by the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington DC. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory designed, built and operates the spacecraft and manages the mission for NASA.
According to the researcher, these results offer fresh perspectives on how magnetic reconnection could heat the solar atmosphere, which then transitions into the solar wind. They also show how solar flares accelerate a small fraction of charged particles to near-relativistic speeds. Of particular interest is understanding how the sun’s atmosphere heats up and accelerates the solar wind. Understanding these processes is also expected to help scientists develop ways to predict and mitigate the effects of solar flares and CMEs, and provide new insights for laboratory fusion research.
Magnetic reconnection near Earth
“Through the SwRI-led Magnetospheric Multiscale mission, scientists made the first direct detection of the source of magnetic reconnection near Earth, observing how this explosive physical process converts stored magnetic energy into kinetic energy and heat,” said SwRI’s Dr Mihir Desai, lead author of a new paper about this research. “Now Parker has made direct observations of how magnetic reconnection at the heliospheric current sheet (HCS), where the interplanetary field reverses its polarity, energizes charged particles to extremely high energies.”
As Parker crossed the HCS, scientists discovered a sunward-directed reconnection jet and sunward-propagating highly energetic protons, establishing their origin from HCS reconnection sites and not from unrelated processes at the sun. Within the core of the reconnection exhaust, Parker detected trapped energetic protons a thousand times greater than the available magnetic energy per particle.
“These findings indicate that magnetic reconnection in the HCS is an important source of energetic particles in the near-sun solar wind,” Desai said. “Everywhere there are magnetic fields there will be magnetic reconnection. But the sun’s magnetic fields are much stronger near the star, so there’s a lot more stored energy to be released.”
“Reports from the American Meteorological Society indicated that the powerful solar events in May 2024 wreaked havoc with farmers when extreme geomagnetic storms disrupted the precise GPS-guided navigation systems used to plant, fertilize and harvest rows of seeds, causing an estimated loss of up to US$500m in earning potential,” Desai continued. “Parker’s access to this new data is critical, particularly as we remain in the midst of a very active solar cycle.”