Energy News  
Iowa Professor Finds The Light


Iowa City - June 1, 2000 -
University of Iowa physics professor Jack Scudder said Thursday that an international team of physicists has significantly advanced mankind's understanding of the northern lights and related phenomena by making the first direct observations of the switch that permits energy to be transferred between the solar wind and the Earth.

Scudder, who spoke on behalf of his co-authors at a news conference at the spring meeting of the American Geophysical Union in Washington, D.C., noted that the naturally occurring switch for this energy transfer, known as "magnetic reconnection," is responsible for the aurora borealis and australis, as well as occasional interruptions in radio and satellite communications.

He said that the outer layer of the Earth's magnetosphere generally behaves like a cocoon, shielding the Earth from reconnection, but that every once in a while a tear appears as a result of reconnection.

"Sometimes the solar wind creates tears in the cocoon, and charged particles and energy from the sun penetrate into the magnetosphere," said Scudder, who is principal investigator for the Hot Plasma Analyzer (HYDRA) on NASA's Polar spacecraft. "We have directly observed these tears for the first time using Polar.

"One of the most exciting things about the detection is finding that such small-scale structures really do exist in the precise sizes predicted 25 years ago. Some of these tears are extremely small -- on the order of one kilometer long," he said.

In the current investigation, scientists involved in the multi-satellite International Solar-Terrestrial Physics (ISTP) program identified two general areas where reconnection occurs.

One region penetrated by Polar is 30,000 to 40,000 miles on the dayside of the cocoon, and the other (observed by the Geotail satellite) is inferred to be some 85,000 to 96,000 miles downwind of the Earth, on the night side of the planet and in the tail of the teardrop-shaped magnetosphere.

ISTP is a collaborative study between NASA, the Japanese space agency (ISAS), and the European Space Agency (ESA), with contributions from Russia's Institute for Space Research (IKI) and many other international science institutions.


Weakened tear in magnetic cocoon about Earth. Color coded by local strength of the magnetic field, B, that almost vanishes at the `X'
The observation of magnetic reconnection is of interest to physicists because it answers a half-century-old question surrounding the origin of the energy responsible for auroras and magnetic disturbances.

On the dayside of the Earth, reconnection allows energy from the solar wind to enter the magnetosphere, that volume of magnetic fields surrounding the Earth that contains the Van Allen radiation belts.

On the night side, reconnection permits the transfer of energy down to the Earth's atmosphere, but the whole sequence is started by reconnection on the dayside, as observed by Polar.

"Everything that happens regarding space weather happens through and because of these slits," Scudder said. "We're excited that the data clearly show the electrons jumping through these slits, doorways really, that open the Earth to these particles from space.

"The $64 question is what makes the tears possible. We'd like to see some more of them to know whether those already detected represent a general or an unusual picture of the switch."

To better define where the tears take place, Scudder has helped outline an entire NASA satellite mission. Dubbed BLAST (Boundary LAyer SnapshoT), it would carefully study these small, but crucial, intersections of the magnetic highways between the sun and the Earth.

The investigation would be a collaborative effort between the University of California, Berkeley; UCLA; the University of Colorado and the University of Iowa.

  • Aurora: The Movie

    Community
    Email This Article
    Comment On This Article

    Related Links
    Space



    Memory Foam Mattress Review
    Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
    XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


    Satellite Launch To Boost DTH In India
    Calcutta, India (SPX) Dec 28, 2005
    The successful launch Thursday of India's heaviest satellite from spaceport of Kourou in French Guyana may have boosted the country's space research efforts to yet another level, but it has also lifted the spirits of at least three Direct-To-Home televisions broadcasters, one of which has been waiting for years to launch its services in India.























  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement