Spacecraft Takes Closest Images Ever of the Sun
A European and NASA spacecraft has sent back the closest pictures ever taken of the sun's surface. They show the surface has thousands of small solar flares, or what scientists are calling "campfires."
Scientists released the first images taken by Solar Orbiter last week. The spacecraft was launched from Cape Canaveral, Florida in February.
The orbiter was around 77 million kilometers away from the sun — about halfway between Earth and the sun — when it took the pictures.
Solar Orbiter's pictures are the first images from so close to the sun's surface. They show colored swirls — bright yellow and dark gray.
Daniel Müller is a European Space Agency project scientist. He told The Associated Press (AP) that the research team had to create a new term for the small flares: campfires.
Müller described the many "campfires" as quite possibly "the tiny cousins of the solar flares that we already know."
These small flares could help explain why the sun's outer covering — the corona — is 300 times hotter than the star's surface. But scientists are waiting for more information from Solar Orbiter's other instruments to know for sure.
David Berghmans is with the Royal Observatory of Belgium. He was the lead scientist who developed the instrument that took the images. Berghmans told the AP that, "When the first images came in, my first thought was, 'This is not possible — it can't be that good.'"
He added, "It was really much better than we expected, but what we dared to hope for."
The $1.5 billion spacecraft will move even closer to the sun's surface in the next two years. The spacecraft will change its orbit as the mission goes on. This will make it possible for Solar Orbiter to take the first pictures of the solar poles.
Solar Orbiter also carries plasma-sampling instruments to offer researchers additional information about the sun.
Project scientist Holly Gilbert notes, "That combination (of instruments) really allows us to make links and connections to what's happening on the sun and what's happening at the spacecraft."
Gilbert is with NASA, the U.S. government's civilian space program.
Solar Orbiter's main mission of examining the sun's polar areas will help researchers understand the causes of solar wind — electrically charged particles that go through our solar system. Solar wind can affect satellites and electronics on Earth.
"This is just the beginning of the long epic journey of Solar Orbiter," Müller said.
I'm John Russell.