SOLAR LOWVIDEO | This illustration depicts the heliosphere, the magnetic bubble that is "blown by the solar wind and outlines the edge of the solar system. Like a deflated tire, the heliosphere is currently shriveled, as the solar wind is at its lowest in 50 years. Full story. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
Every 11 years, the sun gets the doldrums. Solar storms are
fewer and the strength of the solar wind, the stream of charged particles blown
from the sun, declines. But new spacecraft observations have now gotten the
true lowdown: The current solar minimum is the lowest — and one of the longest —
recorded in the past 50 years, since modern measurements began
This period of low solar activity has already lasted six
months longer than the last solar minimum, which was in 1994 and 1995.
The sun’s current state suggests that the heliosphere — the vast,
protective magnetic cavity carved by the solar wind — has temporarily shriveled.
This decline lets more harmful galactic cosmic rays into the solar system and
makes it riskier for astronauts traveling beyond Earth’s own, much smaller
magnetic bubble, or magnetosphere.
The findings may also shed new light on the origin of the
solar wind. The low pressure of the solar wind, combined with other studies
showing reduced solar magnetic activity, suggests that the wind is not only
guided and shaped by the sun’s global magnetic field but is also powered by it,
says David McComas of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, Texas.
McComas and his colleagues describe the findings September
18 online in Geophysical Research Letters. Along with solar physicists,
including Ed Smith of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.,
McComas also detailed the findings during a telephone press briefing on
September 23
The pressure of the solar wind and the strength of the
magnetic field in the current solar minimum “are at an all-time low, at least
since the space age began four sunspot cycles ago,” says Smith. As when a tire
is only partly inflated, the lower pressure suggests the heliosphere bubble
isn’t quite as big as it used to be. That jibes with recent findings from the
venerable Voyager 2 spacecraft, now journeying at the solar system’s outskirts.
“This extreme minimum has important implications for the
solar dynamo for solar activity and perhaps even for terrestrial climate,”
comments solar physicist Spiro Antiochos of NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Md. The dynamo is the roiling motions of gas
inside the sun that generate the sun’s magnetic field.
Because the magnetic field at solar minimum acts as the seed
field for the next minimum, “it may well be that the next cycle will be low,
which could have a cooling effect on terrestrial weather," Antiochos says. "There appears to be
evidence for a correlation between lack of activity and terrestrial cooling.” Such
cooling was observed during an extended period of unusually low solar activity about
300 years ago known as the Maunder Minimum.
Much of the new data come from NASA’s Ulysses spacecraft,
launched in 1990 and the first craft to fly over the sun’s poles. Now just two months
from its deathbed, when its hydrazine fuel is expected to freeze, Ulysses has
found that the polar solar wind has only three-quarters the strength it had
about a decade ago, during the last solar minimum.
Moreover, other spacecraft that measure the solar wind near
the sun’s equator show a similar decline, demonstrating that the phenomenon
involves the entire sun, McComas notes.
If the doldrums continue, the Voyager 1 and Voyager 2
spacecraft, already at the outskirts of the solar system, could reach the solar
system’s very edge a year or two sooner than current estimates of 2010 to 2020,
notes Smith. That's because the heliosphere boundary is also the solar system boundary.
However, Smith adds, “the pressure is expected to increase again as solar
activity picks up, and cause the boundaries to move outward again.”
Voyager 2 recently encountered a region called the
termination shock, where the solar wind slams into interstellar space, at a distance
of about 83.7 AU from the sun. (1 AU is the average Earth-sun separation). That’s 10 AU closer to the sun than when
the Voyager 1 craft encountered the termination shock in 2003, suggesting the
heliosphere has indeed shrunk in the intervening years.
A mission called the Interstellar Boundary Explorer,
scheduled for launch on October 19, may benefit most from the shrunken
heliosphere. From near-Earth orbit, the mission will map the boundary of the
solar system by detecting atoms that originated in the outer heliosphere.
The mission “should begin to see the heliosphere morph ‘in
flight’” as the solar wind grows stronger and reinflates the bubble, comments
Scott McIntosh of the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder.
Things may get even more interesting. Magnetic fields that trap plasma in sunspots have been weakening since 1990. The result is more convection and warming temperatures in the plasma and hence lower visible contrast. If the trend continues (and it has since the paper was written), sunspots will fade from view aroun 2015.
Perhaps the same mechanism was behind the Maunder Minimum, but this is uncharted territory and may be quite a learning experience.
With the diminished size and strength of the heliosphere, I would think ground-based UHECR observatories like H.E.S.S., VERITAS, MAGIC, etc. may be able to see an increase in these cosmic ray fluxes during this time. Sounds like good news for them.For astronauts & space telescopes, probably the opposite.
Perhaps the same mechanism was behind the Maunder Minimum, but this is uncharted territory and may be quite a learning experience.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2008/06/02/livingston-and-penn-paper-sunspots-may-vanish-by-2015/
I don't know about question one, but for the second question:
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/astronomy/solarsystem/where.shtml
And where is our star system in relation to the rest of the galaxy?
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