< %=imgalt%>
Home / Technology News / 2008 / April 2008 / April 2, 2008
Solar flares can get much hotter if focused
Solar / Photovoltaic Industry

Solarpowergetics Installs Bright Solar Outdoor Lights in Southern California, Power to the People

Canadian Solar to Present at the 2007 Deutsche Bank Technology Conference

Suntech to Announce First Quarter 2007 Financial Results on May 29, 2007

Global Solar Photovoltaic Market Breathes Fire After Initial 'Feedstock' Choke

PM's inaugural speech at the International Conference on Strategies for Energy Conservation in the New Millennium

First Gas Discovery under NELP named - Annapurna

Remarkable progress in Cryogenics

Features on Solar Energy

Technology News

Hourglass figures not always healthy for women
Having an imperfect body may not be all that bad, says a new article, which claims that imperfections come with substantial benefits for some women. ANI

Sleep terrors may run in the family
A Canadian study of twins suggests that night terrors, which send children into sudden inconsolable screaming, may run in the family. ANI

Swedish scientists make body-swapping a virtual reality
Cognitive neuroscientists at the Swedish medical university Karolinska Institutet (KI) have successfully created the illusion of body swapping by making subjects perceive the bodies of mannequins and other people as their own. ANI

Solar flares can get much hotter if focused

Using data from solar observatories, astronomers have discovered that solar flares - explosions in the atmosphere of the sun - get much hotter when they stay focused.

London, April 2 : Using data from solar observatories, astronomers have discovered that solar flares - explosions in the atmosphere of the sun - get much hotter when they stay "focused".

Solar flares are caused by the sudden release of magnetic energy. The largest can release as much energy as a billion one-megaton nuclear bombs. However, the flare observed in this study was a much more common "micro" flare.

According to Dr Ryan Milligan of Oak Ridge Association of Universities, Tennessee, "A flare typically divides its energy between directly heating the solar atmosphere and accelerating particles."

"These unusual flares seem to focus on one task, devoting all their energy to heating. This allows them to become millions of degrees hotter than their multi-tasking cousins," he added.

Flares normally occur above loops of electrically conducting gas, called plasma, in the Sun's atmosphere. When a typical flare goes off, it heats the plasma and sends beams of electrons racing down the sides of the loops. The electron beams evaporate more plasma from the Sun's visible surface, which expands back up the loops.

"This evaporated plasma has traditionally been believed to be the source of the hottest temperatures seen in solar flares," said Dr Milligan.

"However, the flare in this new observation reached a temperature of 15 million degrees Celsius - some five million degrees hotter than expected for a flare of this size - without any evidence for beams of accelerated electrons," he added.

Dr Milligan used the RHESSI and Hinode spacecraft to make his observation of the microflare on 7 June 2007.

RHESSI revealed that the flare had a peak temperature of 15 million degrees, and also that the flare showed no evidence for high energy electrons. Hinode was able to show the effects of the energy released at various layers in the solar atmosphere.

In particular, the Extreme ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS) instrument was used to detect signatures of plasma evaporation from the Sun's surface. The low velocities observed confirmed the RHESSI observation that high energy electrons were not present.

"If our assumption is correct, then this result tells us that the energy released during a solar flare is more efficient at achieving a higher temperature if the energy is used to directly heat the plasma in the Sun's atmosphere, instead of being divided between heating and particle acceleration. This very effect has recently been shown in simulations of energy release during microflares," said Dr Milligan.

ANI

December 3, 2008

December 2, 2008

December 1, 2008

November 30, 2008

November 29, 2008

November 28, 2008