Phenomena

Solar Coronal Heating

An image of nanoflares on the Sun in a region with no discernible solar flare activity.

Our Sun‘s visible surface, the photosphere, is about 5800 Kelvin, but the temperature of the wispy corona is far hotter, reaching a million Kelvin in some places. Why the corona is so hot remains something of a mystery. Scientists have theorized multiple culprits for the extreme temperatures found in the corona, but the full details of the phenomenon are still unclear.

Recent solar missions and observations are increasingly identifying small but widespread solar activities, like the nanoflares shown above. Unlike the monstrous coronal loops researchers focused on previously, these flares are tiny and occur in regions without discernible solar flare activity. The nanoflares are brief but they can reach temperatures above a million Kelvin. Since nano- and even picoflares have been observed across the full Sun, they likely play a significant role in the overall picture of coronal heating. (Image credit: ISAS/JAXA; see also L. Sigalotti and F. Cruz)

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