Why in the news?
- The PUNCH mission has captured the image of the solar wind, according to the Principal Investigator of the Mission.
PUNCH Space Mission
- What is it?:
- PUNCH stands for Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere.
- It is a NASA solar mission designed to study the Sun’s corona and the solar wind as an interconnected system.
- Launch: Launched by NASA in SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from California
- Mission Duration: Approximately 2 years
- Orbit: Low Earth Orbit (LEO)
- Key Features:
- Constellation: Four identical, suitcase-sized microsatellites
- Imaging technique: Uses polarimetry- measuring the polarisation of light scattered by particles, allowing 3D mapping of the Sun’s outer layers.
- Data frequency: Captures polarised images every 4 minutes, and unpolarised images every 8 minutes.
- Operation: The four satellites work together as a single virtual instrument generating a continuous, large-scale visualisation of solar activity.
- Significance:
- Provides new insights into solar wind structure and evolution.
- Improves prediction accuracy of space weather events such as CMEs and solar flares.
- Enhances protection of communication systems, satellites, and power grids from solar storms.
- Offers a more comprehensive understanding of the heliosphere, the region influenced by solar activity.
Solar Wind
- What is it?:
- The solar wind is a continuous stream of charged particles- mainly electrons, protons, and alpha particles (helium nuclei)- ejected from the Sun’s outer atmosphere, the corona.
- These particles flow through the entire solar system at speeds of 250–800 km/s, carrying the Sun’s magnetic field with them, forming what is known as the heliosphere- a vast magnetic bubble that envelopes our Solar System.
- Origin:
- Originates from the solar corona, a region with temperatures exceeding 1 million °C.
- The particles gain enough energy to overcome the Sun’s gravitational pull and stream outward.
- Major source regions:
- Coronal holes: Regions with open magnetic field lines (sources of fast solar wind).
- Streamer belt near the solar equator (source of slow solar wind).
- Composition:
- Main constituents: Protons (H⁺), electrons, and alpha particles (He²⁺).
- Trace elements: Heavy ions such as carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, magnesium, silicon, sulfur, and iron.
- The number density near Earth is around 10 protons per cubic centimeter.
- Effects:
- On Earth:
- Interacts with Earth’s magnetosphere, producing auroras near the poles.
- During strong solar activity, it can cause geomagnetic storms, which may disrupt satellite operations, communication systems, and power grids (e.g., 1989 Quebec blackout).
- In Space:
- Shapes the heliosphere and influences planetary atmospheres.
- Creates comet tails that always point away from the Sun due to solar wind pressure.
- On Earth: