More information, of course, requires more complex visualizations and
occasionally such images are not just informative, but beautiful too.
Such is the case with a new technique created by Nicholeen Viall, a
solar scientist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md.
She creates images of the sun reminiscent of Van Gogh, with broad
strokes of bright color splashed across a yellow background. But it's
science, not art. The color of each pixel contains a wealth of
information about the 12-hour history of cooling and heating at that
particular spot on the sun. That heat history holds clues to the
mechanisms that drive the temperature and movements of the sun's
atmosphere, or corona.
"We don't understand why the corona is so hot," says Viall who wrote
about this technique and her conclusions about the corona in a paper
that recently appeared in The Astrophysical Journal. "The
corona is 1,000 times hotter than the sun's surface, when we would
expect it to get cooler as the atmosphere gets further away from the hot
sun, the same way the air gets cooler further away from a fire."
Scientists generally agree that energy in the roiling magnetic fields
of the sun must transfer energy and heat up into the atmosphere, but
the exact details of that process are still debated. Viall created her
technique to see if she could distinguish between theories that describe
coronal heating as uniform over time, versus those that say it comes
from numerous nanoflares on the sun's surface.
To look at the corona from a fresh perspective, Viall created a new
kind of picture, making use of the high resolution provided by NASA's
Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO). SDO's Atmospheric Imaging Assembly
(AIA) provides images of the sun in 10 different wavelengths, each
approximately corresponding to a single temperature of material.
Therefore, when one looks at the wavelength of 171 Angstroms, for
example, one sees all the material in the sun's atmosphere that is a
million degrees Kelvin. By looking at an area of the sun in different
wavelengths, one can get a sense of how different swaths of material
change temperature. If an area seems bright in a wavelength at shows a
hotter temperature an hour before it becomes bright in a wavelength that
shows a cooler temperature, one can gather information about how that
region has changed over time.
To study such temperature changes, many scientists focus on analyzing
a specific subset of solar material, such as giant arcs of charged
particles that leap up off the sun's surface called coronal loops.
Scientists gather information about the loops by comparing nearly
simultaneous images of the sun in different wavelengths. Analysis of the
loops in each image requires time-consuming, manual analysis to
subtract the background observations away from the loops themselves, a
process which is also inherently subject to human judgment and bias. In
addition, each individual image represents light from only a narrow
range of wavelengths, representing material at a narrow range of
temperatures.
Viall wanted to look at as much of the solar material in a given area
of the corona as she could, incorporating information about a variety
of temperatures simultaneously. She also wanted to avoid the subjective
process of subtracting out the background. Instead, she decided to look
at all light coming from a given spot on the sun at the same time. That
meant coming up with a visualization technique to convey all that
information at once -- and thus her Van Gogh-like images were born.
For an interesting spot on the sun, Viall examines six channels over
an entire 12-hour stretch. She compares each channel to the other
channels in turn, assigning it a red, orange, or yellow color if the
area has cooled, and assigning it a blue or green color if the area has
heated up. She assigns the exact shade of the color based on how much
time it took for the temperature change to occur.
"In essence, I'm measuring the time lag of how long it takes a given
area to heat up or cool down," says Viall. "But it's totally automated,
with no need for humans to make a decision about what to incorporate or
ignore. And all of the solar material is represented statistically, not
just one wavelength of light."
Viall's images show a wealth of reds, oranges, and yellow, meaning
that over a 12-hour period the material appear to be cooling. Obviously
there must have been heating in the process as well, since the corona
isn't on a one-way temperature slide down to zero degrees. Any kind of
steady heating throughout the corona would have shown up in Viall's
images, so she concludes that the heating must be quick and impulsive --
so fast that it doesn't show up in her images. This lends credence to
those theories that say numerous nanobursts of energy help heat the
corona.
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