Planet Earth is surrounded by a system of magnetic fields known as the
magnetosphere. This vast, comet-shaped system deflects charged particles
coming from the sun, shielding our planet from harmful particle radiation and
preventing solar wind (i.e., a stream of charged particles released from the
sun's upper atmosphere) from eroding the atmosphere.
While past studies have gathered substantial evidence of the effects that
solar wind can have on Earth's magnetosphere, the impact of solar flares
(i.e., sudden eruptions of electromagnetic radiation on the sun) is poorly
understood. Solar flares are highly explosive events that can last from a
few minutes to hours and can be detected using X-rays or optical devices.
Researchers at Shandong University in China and the National Center for
Atmospheric Research in the U.S. have recently carried out a study
investigating the effects that solar flares can have on Earth's
magnetosphere. Their paper, published in Nature Physics, offers new valuable
insight that could pave the way towards a better understanding of geospace
dynamics. Geospace, the portion of outer space that is closest to Earth,
includes the upper atmosphere, ionosphere (i.e., the ionized part of the
atmosphere) and magnetosphere.
"The magnetosphere is located in the region above the ionosphere and is the
fully ionized space region above 1000 km from the ground," Professor Jing
Liu, one of the researchers who carried out the study, told Phys.org. "The
region is surrounded by the solar wind and is affected and controlled by the
earth's magnetic field and the solar wind's magnetic field."
The magnetosphere is generally described as Earth's protective barrier
against solar wind and other solar particles, as it prevents these particles
from entering the planet's other protective layers. Nonetheless, past
studies showed that when the direction of solar wind is opposite to the
magnetosphere's magnetic field, magnetic lines from these two regions can
'connect." This means that some solar wind particles can be directly
transmitted to the space surrounding Earth.
"We asked ourselves: Can the flare process, which is characterized by
enhanced radiation, not only directly affect the earth's ionosphere, but
also cause disturbance in the magnetosphere like the solar wind?" Liu said.
"To answer this question, we adopted a series of observational datasets,
collected by global satellite navigation systems, the European incoherent
scattering radar network, ionospheric satellites, lunar orbiting satellites,
and more."
Liu and his colleagues analyzed data collected by different devices and
satellites during a solar flare event that took place on 6 September 2017.
To do this, they adopted a recently developed numerical geospace model
developed at the National Center for Atmospheric Research. This model,
called the high spatial-temporal resolution magnetosphere ionosphere
thermosphere model (LTR), reproduces the changes triggered by solar flares
in the magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling system.
Using the LTR model and previously collected data, the researchers were able
to unveil solar flare effects on magnetospheric dynamics and on the
electrodynamic coupling between the magnetosphere and the ionosphere. More
specifically, they observed a rapid and large increase in flare-induced
photoionization of the polar ionospheric E-region at altitudes between 90
and 150 km. The phenomenon observed by Liu and his colleagues appeared to
have a number of effects on the geospace region, including a lower Joule
heating of the Earth's upper atmosphere, a reconfiguration of the
magnetosphere convection and changes in auroral precipitation.
"We demonstrated that solar flare effects extend throughout the geospace via
electrodynamic coupling, and are not limited, as previously believed, to the
atmospheric region where radiation energy is absorbed," Liu explained. "Due
to the similar solar-magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling process in other
earth-like planets, our study also provides new clues for exploring and
understanding the effects of solar flares on other planets. In my future
research, I plan to study the effects of flares on planets with the same
magnetosphere (such as Jupiter, Venus and Saturn)."
Reference:
Jing Liu et al. Solar flare effects in the Earth's magnetosphere, Nature
Physics (2021). DOI:
10.1038/s41567-021-01203-5
Tags:
Space & Astrophysics