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Surf's Up on the Sun

Towering, tsunami-like waves of hot plasma are spotted rolling across the surface of the sun.

Irene Klotz
By Irene Klotz
Wed Dec 2, 2009 12:00 PM ET
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Solar Tsunami

Scientists using the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) confirmed the existence of solar waves.
NASA

Scientists have discovered a new phenomenon on the sun: towering waves that race across its face tsunami-style.

The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory provided a tantalizing glimpse of a solar wave about 12 years ago, but it took the three-dimensional view from NASA's STEREO solar probes to nail it.

WATCH VIDEO: The Sun is the best known star in our solar system, but how much do you really know about it?

"It came as a surprise to us when we started seeing these waves expanding," Joseph Gurman, a solar physicist with NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., told Discovery News.

The waves, which are comprised of plasma, appear at the base of the corona, a couple of thousand kilometers above the surface of the sun. They rise quickly from a central point and spread out in a circular pattern millions of miles in circumference.

Scientists using the Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) confirmed the existence of solar waves in February 2009 when a sunspot erupted, sending a cloud of gas into space and a 62,000-mile-high tsunami sprinting across the surface of the sun at about 560,000 miles per hour.

The twin STEREO satellites recorded the wave from two positions, giving researchers a three-dimensional view of what had happened.

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"(The satellites) allowed us... to determine without doubt the true nature of the wave," lead researcher Spiros Patsourakos, with George Mason University, wrote in a paper published in The Astrophysical Journal Letters.

The waves are associated with flares and solar storms known as coronal mass ejections, which spew billions of tons of plasma and embedded magnetic fields from the sun's corona into interplanetary space.

Plasma that encounters Earth's magnetosphere can trigger powerful geomagnetic storms that can interfere with Global Positioning System radio signals, satellites and other technologies.

Studying how the waves grow and travel should give scientists fresh insights into the sun's magnetic environment, Gurman added.

"Magnetic field strength tends to be the dominant structure at this level," he said.

Monitoring for waves also should allow solar physicists to pinpoint the source of coronal mass ejections that may be heading toward Earth, added Simon Plunkett, with Naval Research Laboratory in Washington, D.C.

"It's not clear from coronagraph observations alone whether a CME is coming toward you or going away from you. It looks almost the same in both directions," Plunkett told Dicovery News.

Scientists had debated whether the tsunami-like feature was actually a magnetic wave propagating through the solar atmosphere, or a footprint of a coronal mass ejection. The new study should end that discussion, Plunkett said.

"It's like a supersonic aircraft during a shock wave ahead of it. The CME is the driving and it's pushing the wave out in front of it," he said.

Tags: NASA, The Sun, Tsunami

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