Coronal rain has been seen splashing on the sun [View all]
By Lisa Grossman
July 12, 2023 at 9:00 am
Plasma rain in the suns atmosphere makes a splash when it lands. New observations from the European Space Agencys Solar Orbiter have revealed previously unseen details of how this coronal rain falls, including bright fireball effects and sudden upward surges in plasma.
These are the highest resolution images we have ever obtained from the solar corona, says solar physicist Patrick Antolin of Northumbria University in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. He presented the results at the National Astronomy Meeting in Cardiff, Wales, the week of July 3 and in a paper to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysics.
The corona is the suns wispy upper atmosphere, the sizzling tangle of plasma and magnetism that is visible during a total eclipse (SN: 6/30/19). When clumps of scorching-hot plasma in the corona suddenly cool, they condense and fall toward the solar surface, just like water droplets in Earths atmosphere. This coronal rain has been observed before, but details of its formation and falling were fuzzy (SN: 5/24/18).
The 2020 launch of Solar Orbiter promised to change that (SN: 2/9/20). The probe is making passes over the suns unexplored polar regions, carrying high resolution cameras and other instruments to investigate solar mysteries. In late March 2022, Solar Orbiter made its closest approach to the sun to date, swooping within 49 million kilometers of our star about a third of the distance between the sun and Earth.
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/coronal-rain-sun-space