NASA Just Observed a Totally New Kind of Magnetic Eruption on The Sun.
The surface of the Sun is never still. Upon this burning ball of gas, a continual flow of super-hot plasma creates ropes of magnetic fields that can twist and tangle with one another.As the star rotates, these invisible lines snap apart and join together again, bursting into flares, storms and eruptions of plasma.
This phenomenon, known as magnetic reconnection, has been seen many times before on the Sun and even around our own planet, but we've only captured spontaneous reconnections in the past.
For the first time ever, astronomers at NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory have now observed a magnetic explosion on the Sun that was triggered by a nearby eruption - a forced reconnection rather than a spontaneous one.
Launched into the upper reaches of the Sun's atmosphere, this large discharge of solar matter was caught falling back into a web of magnetic field lines, causing them to reconnect with a bang in a distinct X shape.
"This was the first observation of an external driver of magnetic reconnection," says solar scientist Abhishek Srivastava from the Indian Institute of Technology (BHU) in Varanasi, India.
"This could be very useful for understanding other systems. For example, Earth's and planetary magnetospheres, other magnetised plasma sources, including experiments at laboratory scales where plasma is highly diffusive and very hard to control.
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