|
The Solar-B Brochure
|
The Dynamic SunThe Sun is the main source of light and energy for all life on Earth. We seek to understand the origins of solar activity and variability which disrupt our home environment. "How are the conditions for life on Earth maintained? How does the solar output vary? What knowledge from space can improve the quality of life on Earth?" (from NASA Strategic Plan, 1994) The Sun-Earth SystemSolar-B will reveal the mechanisms for solar variability and study the origins of space weather and global change. The Sun and Earth form a tightly coupled system, with solar variability driving effects ranging from space weather to climate change. Global Climate: The Sun's brightness is not constant and its magnetic activity influences the Earth's temperature, contributing both to global warming and little ice ages.Upper Atmosphere: The Sun's magnetic activity causes extreme variations in ultraviolet and X-ray radiation. These radiations affect the Earth's ionosphere and the protective ozone layer. Space Weather: The Earth is constantly bombarded by solar material accelerated in the corona. Frequent magnetic disruptions eject massive clouds which cause magnetic storms around the Earth. Energetic particles often create local radiation hazards in space.
Broader Implications: Our Dynamic UniverseSolar-B will provide detailed information about the dynamic behavior of cosmic magnetic fields. Astronomical objects from dwarf stars to accretion disks to giant elliptical galaxies have dynamic magnetic fields, the origins of which are not well understood. Pulsars such as the Crab have magnetic fields a billion times stronger than the Sun's, transmitting sufficient energy to power the entire Crab nebula. Magnetic fields in cosmic jets cause massive radio emission by interaction with high-energy particles. Our own Sun has the most intense magnetism in the solar system. The Sun's atmosphere, the million-degree corona, its dynamic nature, and the solar wind extending out to the Earth and beyond, are all direct consequences of the Sun's magnetic activity.
The Solar-B MissionSolar-B is:
Understanding the Dynamic SunSolar-B will provide a new comprehensive view of the dynamic solar atmosphere and engender a unique and timely interaction between theory and observations. Observational Advances: Theoretical Advances: Science Objectives:
Objective: To Understand Magnetic Field Creation and DestructionCreation: Destruction: Objective: To Understand Modulation of the Sun's LuminosityAll life on Earth depends on the Sun's radiation for its existence. Small changes in the solar output can change our climate and weather, resulting in enormous impact on human civilization. Measurement of the solar "constant" shows the Sun to be less luminous at sunspot cycle minima. An extended period of abnormally low activity coincided with the "Little Ice Age" in the 17th century. Extremely small scale features in the solar photosphere cause the solar cycle changes in the luminosity. Solar-B will make the first observations with resolution, wavelength coverage, and temporal sampling adequate to determine the role of these features in the long-term solar luminosity changes.
Objective: To Understand Production of UV and X RadiationThe Sun is a powerful and highly variable source of ultraviolet and X radiation, which has major effects on our environment. The solar UV and X radiation originates in the chromosphere and corona, where temperatures rise to over one million degrees. In flares, energetic particles and even gamma rays are produced, with coronal temperatures exceeding ten million degrees. Solar-B will have the unprecedented spatial resolution and the wavelength and temporal coverage needed to understand the processes which produce the UV and X-ray emission.
Objective: To Understand Causes of the Solar Wind and EruptionsSolar Wind: The million-degree corona
continually expands outward, becoming a supersonic wind that
blows past the Earth, buffeting the geomagnetic field and dumping
energy into the upper atmosphere. Solar-B will:
Programmatic Benefits to NASA
SummaryWhat: Solar-B contains a set of high-resolution solar telescopes and spectrometers. The data will reveal the mechanisms of solar variability that arise in the dynamic structure of the solar atmosphere. Why: We need such data to understand the variable Sun and its effect on terrestrial climate (global change) and space weather. Science:
Technology:
Outreach:
|
|
Mail Code SD50, NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL 35812
Mail Code SD50, NASA/Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL 35812
|