Research

Escaping the Sun

An enormous burst of plasma from the Sun's surface.

One enduring mystery of the solar wind — a stream of high-energy particles expelled from the sun — is how the particles get accelerated in the first place. The sun frequently belches out spurts of plasma, but without further momentum, that material simply falls back to the sun’s surface under the star’s gravity. Mechanisms like shock waves can further accelerate particles that are already moving quickly, but they cannot explain how the particles get going in the first place.

A recent study used supercomputers to tackle this challenging problem in turbulent plasma physics. Each simulation tracked nearly 200 billion particles, requiring tens of thousands of processors. The results showed that turbulence itself provides the necessary initial acceleration and serves as the first step to getting particles moving fast enough to escape the sun. (Image credit: NASA SDO; research credit: L. Comisso and L. Sironi; via Physics World)

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