Astronomers spot aurora on the sun for the 1st time
Scientists have spotted a stunning “aurora-like” display of crackling radio waves over the surface of the sun that is strikingly similar to the Northern Lights on Earth.
The solar lightshow took place roughly 40,000 kilometers above a sunspot — a magnetically warped dark patch on our star’s surface. Astronomers on Earth detected the bursts of radio waves over the course of a week.
Scientists have detected aurora-like radio signals from distant stars in the past, but this is the first time they’ve seen a signal of this kind from our own sun. They published their findings in the journal Nature Astronomy.
“This is quite unlike the typical, transient solar radio bursts typically lasting minutes or hours,” lead author Sijie Yu, an astronomer at New Jersey Institute of Technology’s Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research (NJIT-CSTR), said in a statement. “It’s an exciting discovery that has the potential to alter our comprehension of stellar magnetic processes.”
On Earth, auroras are the result of energetic solar debris zipping through the atmosphere near the poles, where the protective magnetic field is weakest, and agitating oxygen and nitrogen molecules. This causes the molecules to release energy in the form of light, tracing rippling curtains of color across the sky.
Solar debris is usually fired away from the sun when magnetic fields around sunspots knot into kinks before suddenly snapping. The resulting release of energy launches bursts of radiation called solar flares and explosive jets of solar material called coronal mass ejections (CMEs).
By pointing a radio telescope at a sunspot on our star’s surface, the researchers detected an aurora-like emission above it, which they believe is the result of electrons from solar flares being accelerated along the sunspot’s powerful magnetic field lines. “However, unlike the Earth’s auroras, these sunspot aurora emissions occur at frequencies ranging from hundreds of thousands of kHz [kilohertz] to roughly 1 million kHz — a direct result of the sunspot’s magnetic field being thousands of times stronger than Earth’s,” Yu said. For comparison, a typical aurora on Earth emits light at frequencies between 100 to 500 kHz.
The researchers say their discovery has opened up new ways to study the sun’s activity, and they have begun poring through archival data to find hidden evidence of past solar auroras.