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- <text id=89TT1724>
- <link 90TT1936>
- <link 89TT0036>
- <title>
- July 03, 1989: Fury On The Sun
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- July 03, 1989 Great Ball Of Fire:Angry Sun
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 46
- COVER STORY
- Fury on The Sun
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Once worshiped as a god, earth's star is revealing the secrets
- of its awesome power
- </p>
- <p>By Leon Jaroff
- </p>
- <p> Strolling outside Arizona's Kitt Peak National Observatory
- during a work break, staff observer Paul Avellar at first
- thought the angry red glow in the night sky was caused by
- forest fires. Then, seeing a greenish fringe and vertical
- streamers stretching like ribbons above the horizon, he realized
- what was happening. He raced to a telephone and called his wife
- and friends, awakening them and insisting they share the view.
- "A chance like this doesn't come along very often," says
- Avellar. "To see the northern lights is very humbling and
- awe-inspiring. You realize the sun is just going about its
- business and making our nighttime sky glow without any trouble
- at all. It makes you wonder what would happen if the sun ever
- really got mad."
- </p>
- <p> Some 93 million miles away, the sun was, at the very least,
- agitated. In early March, an area of sunspots large enough to
- contain 70 earth-size planets had come into view around the
- eastern rim (to astronomers, the eastern edge of the sun is to the left, as
- viewed from earth.) of the glowing orb. Created by intense magnetic
- fields and cooler than the surrounding gases, the sunspots were
- visible as dark blemishes on the fiery surface. Just as
- astronomers were turning their attention to the mottled region, a
- bright spot suddenly appeared in its midst. It spread like a
- prairie wildfire, glowing white hot on the sun's yellow face
- and quickly expanding to cover hundreds of thousands of square
- miles. The monster blotch was an unusually large solar flare, a
- stupendous explosion that belched radiation and billions of tons
- of matter far into space.
- </p>
- <p> The great flare, and its coterie of sunspots, was an
- unmistakable signal. It heralded the imminent arrival of the
- solar maximum: the period every eleven years or so when the sun
- reaches its peak levels of activity and pointedly reminds earth
- dwellers of its awesome power. At maximum, the sun bombards the
- planet with radiation and particles, causing unusually
- brilliant auroras, communications blackouts and power failures.
- But it also gives scientists a fresh opportunity to solve some
- of the mysteries surrounding the star that provides the earth
- with energy, drives the weather and sustains life itself.
- </p>
- <p> During a maximum, marked by a jump in the number of sunspots
- and flares, giant loops of incandescent gases, called
- prominences, proliferate, shooting tens of thousands of miles
- above the solar surface, sometimes hanging suspended for
- months. The solar corona, the halo around the sun visible during
- total eclipses, becomes fuller and brighter; great blobs of the
- corona, containing billions of tons of hot gas, occasionally
- burst free, shooting into space at speeds as high as 2 million
- m.p.h. And the earth's upper atmosphere, pummeled by solar
- particles, is laced by electrical currents of as much as a
- million amperes. These in turn create powerful magnetic fields
- that raise havoc below.
- </p>
- <p> Because the previous maximum occurred in late 1979,
- astronomers had targeted 1991 as the year when solar frenzy
- would again peak. But the sun is notably capricious. While the
- intervals between maximums average eleven years, some have been
- as short as seven, others as long as 17. Ever since the sun
- began revving up three years ago toward the next maximum, its
- activity has mounted with unprecedented speed.
- </p>
- <p> "It is the fastest riser on record," says Ron Moore, an
- astronomer at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville,
- Ala. So fast, in fact, that astronomers are betting on 1990 or
- perhaps even later this year, instead of 1991, as the beginning
- of the maximum. And what a maximum it could be. Despite the
- ferocity of the March flares, Moore warns, "this cycle is still
- in its early phase. It's got quite a way to go." Solar buffs are
- speculating it might approach the violence reached by the
- 1957-58 maximum, which touched off five disruptive geomagnetic
- superstorms and vivid auroral displays. Says astronomer Donald
- Neidig at the National Solar Observatory outpost on Sacramento
- Peak, near Sunspot, N. Mex.: "We can't rule out a record
- breaker."
- </p>
- <p> In anticipation of the fireworks, astronomers scheduled a
- two-week, worldwide solar-observation period during the second
- half of June. The project was timed to benefit from the
- observations of the Solar Maximum Mission satellite (nicknamed
- Solar Max) before it plunges to its death. Lofted into earth
- orbit in 1980 to monitor the sun's activity, the satellite is
- gradually descending and will probably re-enter the earth's
- atmosphere in November and be incinerated. Solar Max's readings
- of the sun's activity were coordinated with observations made
- all over the world by ground-based telescopes and instruments
- mounted on high-flying rockets. A hundred solar centers around
- the globe were linked by an electronic-mail network designed to
- provide the latest data on the sun's behavior.
- </p>
- <p> A major goal of the project was to catch a flare in the act,
- mapping all the solar high jinks associated with it from
- beginning to end. The sun's timing could not have been better.
- During the first week of observations, it set off several large
- flares and ejected billions of tons of matter in a prominence
- that extended more than 200,000 miles into space.
- </p>
- <p> The intense solar observations should provide clues to many
- of the still unanswered or only partly resolved questions about
- the sun: Does the solar cycle affect terrestrial weather? What
- internal mechanisms control the cycle? Is the sun growing
- cooler? Hotter? Is there a basic flaw in the current theory
- about the fusion process that powers the solar furnace?
- </p>
- <p> While the recent flares did not measure up to the March
- conflagration, astronomers were jubilant. "We have been
- exceptionally lucky," says Alan Kiplinger, a solar physicist at
- the University of Colorado. "It's unusual to have the sun
- cooperate."
- </p>
- <p> Fortunately for earth dwellers, the March flare occurred on
- the easternmost edge of the sun and thus aimed its full force
- away from the earth. But on March 10, when the sun's stately
- rotation brought the turbulent group of sunspots to a position
- more directly facing the earth, a second, only slightly less
- powerful flare erupted in the region. Eight minutes later,
- traveling at the speed of light, a blast of X-ray and
- ultraviolet radiation seared the earth's upper atmosphere.
- Within an hour, high-energy protons began to arrive, followed in
- three days by a massive bombardment of lower-energy protons and
- electrons.
- </p>
- <p> Among the first to feel the effects of the flare's fury was
- the orbiting Solar Max. As the radiation saturated Solar Max's
- instruments, a NASA spokesman reported, "the satellite was
- stunned for a minute and then recovered." Heated by the
- incoming blast of radiation, the upper fringe of the atmosphere
- expanded farther into space. Low-orbiting satellites,
- encountering that fringe and running into increasing drag,
- slowed and dropped into still lower orbits. A secret Defense
- Department satellite began a premature and fatal tumble, and the
- tracking system that keeps exact tabs on some 19,000 objects in
- earth orbit briefly lost track of 11,000 of them. Solar Max
- descended by as much as half a mile in a single day, almost
- certainly hastening its demise.
- </p>
- <p> On the earth, the flare's effects were equally disruptive.
- Shortwave transmissions were interrupted, some for as long as 24
- hours, and satellite communication and a Coast Guard loran
- navigation system were temporarily overwhelmed. Powerful
- transient magnetic fields, generated in the upper atmosphere by
- the flare, induced electrical currents in transmission lines
- and wiring, and mystified homeowners reported automatic garage
- doors opening and closing on their own. A surge of
- flare-induced current was blamed by Hydro-Quebec officials for
- shutting down the power company's system and blacking out parts
- of Montreal and the province of Quebec for as long as nine
- hours. These startling phenomena were shrugged off by Sacramento
- Peak's Neidig. "A really big flare," he says, "can produce
- enough energy to supply a major city with electricity for 200
- million years."
- </p>
- <p> By far the most dramatic manifestation of the solar flare
- was the two-night, spectacular display of the aurora borealis,
- or northern lights, that awed Paul Avellar and millions of
- others. Arriving high-energy electrons, deflected by the
- earth's magnetic field, spilled into the upper atmosphere near
- the north and south polar regions, which are unprotected by
- magnetic-field lines. Acting much as does the electrical current
- in a neon sign, the electrons banged into oxygen atoms, causing
- them to emit red and green light.
- </p>
- <p> Ordinarily far less intense and visible only in arctic
- climes, the glowing, flickering aurora was seen as far south as
- Brownsville, Texas, and Key West, Fla. Alarmed Floridians,
- unfamiliar with the lights and fearing that a catastrophe had
- occurred somewhere in the north, flooded police switchboards
- with calls.
- </p>
- <p> The two great flares of March were not isolated events. Nine
- other major outbursts and hundreds of smaller ones were recorded
- during the two weeks it took for the sunspot region to rotate
- out of view. In the months since, as the sun moves erratically
- toward its maximum, several flares have been observed every day.
- </p>
- <p> The sun has long been pre-eminent in human thoughts and
- actions. Almost from the beginning, people worshiped the sun as
- the beneficent provider of light and life, and as a god, called
- Ra by the Egyptians, Helios by the Greeks and Sol by the
- Romans. To the Aztecs, the sun god was Huitzilopochtli, whom
- they nourished with human sacrifices. Egypt's great pyramids at
- Giza were built with their sides aligned with the rising sun at
- the vernal equinox, and the temple complex at Karnak was
- dedicated to Ra. The ancient circle at Stonehenge, in England,
- was apparently constructed so that the sun would rise over one
- of the great stones at the time of the summ-er solstice.
- </p>
- <p> From the beginnings of history and literature, human beings
- have also invoked the sun. In rejecting peace offers from Darius
- before the battle of Gaugamela, Alexander the Great explained,
- "Heaven cannot brook two suns, nor earth two masters." And in
- 1911, Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany, speaking of his nation,
- declared, "No one can dispute with us the place in the sun that
- is our due."
- </p>
- <p> Through the centuries, few natural phenomena have inspired
- as much fear and awe as solar eclipses. The ancient Chinese used
- firecrackers and gongs to drive away the spirit they thought was
- devouring the sun. Mark Twain's Connecticut Yankee, aware that
- a most timely total eclipse was going to occur, escaped being
- burned at the stake by King Arthur's knights when he predicted
- that the sun would disappear. A benign form of sun worship
- continues to this day, not only among beachgoers but also by a
- group of intrepid American astronomy buffs who have traveled
- around the world by plane, ship and jeep, from Java to Siberia
- to Africa, to view each of the past dozen total eclipses.
- </p>
- <p> Even in ancient times, however, an occasional hardy soul
- refused to deify the sun. The Greek philosopher Anaxagoras
- brazenly claimed that it was merely a ball of fiery stone, and
- was arrested and banished from Athens for his blasphemy. But
- his radical concept caught on and was later refined by
- Aristotle, who proclaimed the sun an unchanging sphere of pure
- fire, devoid of any imperfections.
- </p>
- <p> Aristotle's view prevailed through the Middle Ages, was
- embraced by Christianity and went largely unquestioned until
- Galileo and other early 17th century sky watchers pointed the
- newly invented telescope at the sun and saw black spots on its
- surface. So much for solar purity. Despite clerical
- disapproval, the reality of sunspots was quickly accepted.
- Still, more than two centuries passed before Samuel Heinrich
- Schwabe, a German apothecary and amateur astronomer, discovered
- the strange, cyclic behavior of the solar blemishes.
- </p>
- <p> Schwabe had been searching for the hypothetical planet
- Vulcan, supposedly the closest one to the sun, hoping to spot it
- in silhouette as it moved across the solar disk. In the process,
- he observed and kept meticulous records of sunspots over a
- 17-year period. Finally, in 1843, he recognized and announced
- the eleven-year cyclic nature of the spots and wrote, "I may
- compare myself to Saul, who went to seek his father's ass and
- found a Kingdom."
- </p>
- <p> In the years since, by tabulating sunspot records going back
- to the early 18th century and using improved telescopes,
- satellites, advanced instruments and modern theory, scientists
- have become ever more familiar with the bizarre dance of the
- sunspots. Each cycle begins when spots show up in both the
- northern and southern hemispheres about 35 degrees away from
- the solar equator. As the cycle matures and the older sunspots
- fade away (some last only a few hours, others for weeks and
- even months), new and more numerous spots appear at lower
- latitudes. Toward the end of the cycle, diminished in number,
- they appear at latitudes some 5 degrees from the equator.
- </p>
- <p> Sunspots tend to travel in pairs or groups of opposite
- polarity, like the ends of horseshoe magnets poking through the
- solar surface. During one eleven-year cycle, as the blemishes
- traverse the face of the sun in an east-west direction, the
- leading spots of each group in the northern hemisphere will
- generally have positive polarity, the trailing spots negative.
- In the southern hemisphere, the leading spots will be negative.
- During the next cycle, the hemisphere polarities will reverse.
- On average, then, 22 years will pass between solar maximums of
- the same sunspot polarity. This suggests to many astronomers
- that the fundamental solar cycle is 22 years rather than eleven.
- </p>
- <p> Since the sun in myriad ways governs the very existence of
- all terrestrial life, the cyclic changes in the sunspot
- population have, ever since Schwabe, inspired speculation about
- their effect on solar radiation and, consequently, on the
- earth. Though the sun is a rather ordinary star, its vital
- statistics are breathtaking by earthly standards. Some 865,000
- miles in diameter, it consists largely of hydrogen (72%) and
- helium (27%) and is 333,000 times as massive as the earth. Solar
- temperatures range from about 27 million degrees F (if current
- theory is correct. But only about a third the number of
- neutrinos [particles with little or no mass that travel at
- the speed of light] that the sun should be producing at this
- temperature have been detected, leading some scientists to
- speculate that the core temperature is lower.) in the core,
- where 600 million tons of hydrogen are fused into helium every
- second, to 10,000 degrees F on the photosphere, or surface.
- </p>
- <p>--J. Madeleine Nash/Sunspot
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-