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Magnetic 'Braids' May Cook the Sun's Corona

astroengine writes "Scientists have long puzzled over why the surface of the sun is cooler than its corona, the outer hazy atmosphere visible during a solar eclipse. Now, thanks to a five-minute observation by a small, but very high-resolution ultraviolet telescope, they have some answers. Hi-C, which was launched aboard a suborbital rocket to study the sun without interference from Earth's atmosphere, revealed interwoven magnetic fields braided like hair. When the braids relaxed, they released energy, heating the corona (abstract). 'I had no idea we would see structures like that in the corona. Seeing these braids was very new to me,' astrophysicist Jonathan Cirtain with NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., told Discovery News."

12 of 32 comments (clear)

  1. HI-C by schneidafunk · · Score: 2, Funny

    When I'm out in the sun, I love me some hi-c, or corona.

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    Some people die at 25 and aren't buried until 75. -Benjamin Franklin
  2. Yes. by earls · · Score: 4, Informative

    As soon as fusion is mastered. These braids are just moderating the release of energy from the star.

    1. Re:Yes. by Your.Master · · Score: 2

      That's like saying fire is mastered because we know how to light a match and drop it on the forest floor.

      You know that mastering fusion, in this context -- the context of producing energy -- means being able to safely control a fusion reaction with nontrivial net usable energy output. Right now, fusors do the safe control and H-bombs do the net energy output, but we don't have something that does both at once.

  3. Re:New energy source? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Conservation of Energy says no... if you make a magnetic field you get at most, in a perfect world, as much as energy back as you spent making the field. Positive energy production only comes from reduction of potential energy (lost mass, broken chemical bonds, etc.). If you aren't destroying something your not getting energy out.

  4. Re:sounds like... by Immerman · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Or the neurons of a sun-spanning super-mind.

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  5. Corona? by canderley · · Score: 2

    How many limes is it going to take to make it taste better?

  6. Re:New energy source? by vlm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Other way around. Plasmas are unstable. Pretty much any time you dump energy into them, they get all whacked out on a small scale. This specific mode of instability on the sun wasn't expected, and it might even be a totally new instability mode, but speaking generally "plasmas behaving badly when you pump energy into them" has been a bug for fusion research for a very long time. You want the energy to be smoothly stable in the plasma not some whacked out thing because whacked out things tend to locally adsorb the energy from a big region, concentrate it in a little area getting hotter and hotter, which exceeds and breaks containment in its local area, end result is the plasma energy gets dumped into the diverter (or worst case, wall).

    Crappy cooking analogy is when you're melting chocolate and the chocolate instead of being smooth thru the entire bowl suddenly phase transitions (more or less) and siezes into ... whatever the hell siezed chocolate is. Crystallized chocolate I guess.. Whoops. Or you're trying to make a nice mayonnaise emulsion but something keeps breaking the F-ing emulsion so you just get icky oil and water instead of a bucket of mayo. Now I'm getting hungry...

    Crappy /. car analogy is something like car engines produce the most energy when they burn real smoothly. Crazy ass detonations aka pinging ruins the smooth burning and although you get the same CO2 out the tailpipe, you get much less power at the crankshaft. You can fix that with water injection, or modify the compression ratio, cool the intake air, or clean the cylinder/head walls if they're coated with soot... all stuff you can't do in a reactor. More or less.

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    "Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
  7. Also proves by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 4, Funny

    The Sun is Jamaican

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  8. Re:If only! by ozduo · · Score: 2

    If only my father had been rich and smart, I could spend all day blogging here instead of working for a living!

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    I got to the chocolate box before you, that's why the hard ones have teeth marks.
  9. Offtopic but cool video of the Sun by riverat1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Last week the Astronomy Picture of the Day web site had this impressive video of the eruption of a solar prominence. If you haven't seen it you should check it out.

    http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap130115.html

  10. Wait, not expected? by Areyoukiddingme · · Score: 2

    I thought the braided magnetic fields in the corona were already known? Isn't that what the Electric Universe people are on about? I could swear I've even seen the word "braided" in the context of solar magnetic fields in print somewhere before. Something about why sunspot eruptions tend to arc, rather than simply flow out in a straight line (for big ones that should be achieving escape velocity), or the shape of the arc for smaller ones. The arcs are too small to be purely gravitational, and the reason is the plasma is following magnetic field lines.

  11. Am I the only one ... by MadMaverick9 · · Score: 2

    That read the title as: Magnetic "Brides" may cook ...