19 agosto 2011

NASA: il primo film della massa espulsa dal sole

Oggi la NASA ha tenuto una conferenza stampa per presentare i risultati di un lungo lavoro di analisi dei dati trasmessi dalla coppia di sonde orbitanti della missione STEREO, incaricata di studiare fenomeni dalla complessa dinamica come le eiezioni di massa coronale dal sole. Alcuni giornali importanti (per esempio il Daily Mail), forse riprendendo le agenzie, non hanno capito nulla e hanno pubblicato titoli allarmistici sull'arrivo di una devastante tempesta solare sul nostro pianeta. Il quotidiano britannico arriva a dire che la conferenza stampa della NASA è stata organizzata proprio per contribuire a fare fronto contro questa emergenza. In realtà i fenomeni descritti in questo filmato:

risalgono al 2008 e hanno appunto richiesto un lungo studio.
Sul sito di SpaceWeather.com è disponibile un filmato Quicktime ancora più dettagliato. Secondo gli scienziati è la prima volta che, grazie alla particolare prospettiva dovuta alla posizione delle sonde STEREO nella loro orbita, è possibile correlare anche visivamente il momento dell'espulsione della massa solare con l'arrivo del plasma qui a terra. Finora ci siamo dovuti accontentare di una visuale per così dire "frontale" che non consente di capire come il plasma evolve e cambia forma mentre viene catapultato fuori dalla fornace del sole. Quando arriva ai limiti del sistema solare il volume di questa massa può essere aumentato di dieci milioni di volte. Informazioni come queste possono aiutarci a prevenire gli effetti più devastanti di eventi che possono influire pesantemente, qui sulla terra, sulle linee dell'alta tensione, i satelliti e le radiocomunicazioni.

Spacecraft Sees Solar Storm Engulf Earth

August 18, 2011: For the first time, a spacecraft far from Earth has turned and watched a solar storm engulf our planet. The movie, released today during a NASA press conference, has galvanized solar physicists, who say it could lead to important advances in space weather forecasting.
“The movie sent chills down my spine,” says Craig DeForest of the Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colorado. "It shows a CME swelling into an enormous wall of plasma and then washing over the tiny blue speck of Earth where we live. I felt very small.”
CMEs are billion-ton clouds of solar plasma launched by the same explosions that spark solar flares. When they sweep past our planet, they can cause auroras, radiation storms, and in extreme cases power outages. Tracking these clouds and predicting their arrival is an important part of space weather forecasting.
“We have seen CMEs before, but never quite like this,” says Lika Guhathakurta, program scientist for the STEREO mission at NASA headquarters. “STEREO-A has given us a new view of solar storms.”
STEREO-A is one of two spacecraft launched in 2006 to observe solar activity from widely-spaced locations. At the time of the storm, STEREO-A was more than 65 million miles from Earth, giving it the “big picture” view other spacecraft in Earth orbit have been missing.
When CMEs first leave the sun, they are bright and easy to see. Visibility is quickly reduced, however, as the clouds expand into the void. By the time a typical CME crosses the orbit of Venus, it is a billion times fainter than the surface of the full Moon, and more than a thousand times fainter than the Milky Way. CMEs that reach Earth are almost as gossamer as vacuum itself and correspondingly transparent.
“Pulling these faint clouds out of the confusion of starlight and interplanetary dust has been an enormous challenge,” says DeForest.
Indeed, it took almost three years for his team to learn how to do it. Footage of the storm released today was recorded back in December 2008, and they have been working on it ever since. Now that the technique has been perfected, it can be applied on a regular basis without such a long delay.
Alysha Reinard of NOAA’s Space Weather Prediction Center explains the benefits for space weather forecasting:
“Until quite recently, spacecraft could see CMEs only when they were still quite close to the sun. By calculating a CME's speed during this brief period, we were able to estimate when it would reach Earth. After the first few hours, however, the CME would leave this field of view and after that we were 'in the dark' about its progress.”
“The ability to track a cloud continuously from the Sun to Earth is a big improvement,” she continues. “In the past, our very best predictions of CME arrival times had uncertainties of plus or minus 4 hours,” she continues. “The kind of movies we’ve seen today could significantly reduce the error bars.”
The movies pinpoint not only the arrival time of the CME, but also its mass. From the brightness of the cloud, researchers can calculate the gas density with impressive precision. Their results for the Dec. 2008 event agreed with actual in situ measurements at the few percent level. When this technique is applied to future storms, forecasters will be able to estimate its impact with greater confidence.
At the press conference, DeForest pointed out some of the movie’s highlights: When the CME first left the sun, it was cavernous, with walls of magnetism encircling a cloud of low-density gas. As the CME crossed the Sun-Earth divide, however, its shape changed. The CME “snow-plowed” through the solar wind, scooping up material to form a towering wall of plasma. By the time the CME reached Earth, its forward wall was sagging inward under the weight of accumulated gas.
The kind of magnetic transformations revealed by the movie deeply impressed Guhathakurta: “I have always thought that in heliophysics understanding the magnetic field is equivalent to the ‘dark energy’ problem of astrophysics. Often, we cannot see the magnetic field, yet it orchestrates almost everything. These images from STEREO give us a real sense of what the underlying magnetic field is doing.”
All of the speakers at today’s press event stressed that the images go beyond the understanding of a single event. The inner physics of CMEs have been laid bare for the first time—a development that will profoundly shape theoretical models and computer-generated forecasts of CMEs for many years to come.
“This is what the STEREO mission was launched to do,” concludes Guhathakurta, “and it is terrific to see it live up to that promise.

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