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Observing the sun's magnetic pull. (Astronomy).


A spacecraft devoted to studies of the sun has spotted clouds of gas that seem to be headed the wrong way. The clouds are falling back toward the sun, against the rapidly outflowing streams of ionized i·on·ize  
tr. & intr.v. i·on·ized, i·on·iz·ing, i·on·iz·es
To convert or be converted totally or partially into ions.



i
 gas known as the solar wind.

According to a new report, the Earth-orbiting Solar and Heliospheric Observatory The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) is a spacecraft that was launched on an Atlas IIAS launch vehicle on 2 December 1995 to study the Sun, and began normal operations in May 1996.  (SOHO Soho (sōhō`, sə–), district of Westminster, London, England, known for its continental restaurants. Once a fashionable quarter, it became popular among writers and artists in the 19th cent. ) has observed some 8,000 of these inflowing clouds. The researchers have determined that the sun's gravity isn't the primary force pulling the clouds back.

In the Nov. 20 ASTROPHYSICAL JOURNAL LETTERS, Neil R. Sheeley and Y.-M. Wang of the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory Noun 1. Naval Research Laboratory - the United States Navy's defense laboratory that conducts basic and applied research for the Navy in a variety of scientific and technical disciplines
NRL
 in Washington, D.C., suggest that it's the sun's magnetic field that drags the clouds of gas back toward the sun.

Magnetic fields carpet the region just above the sun's surface, with some magnetic field lines looping out into space and others looping back in toward the sun. Explosive outpourings of gas, as well as the steady, outgoing solar wind, stretch some of these loops far into space. When the loops stretch out this way, adjacent magnetic field lines near the solar surface get closer together. These adjacent field lines point in opposite directions.

When the opposing fields meet, they combine to form new loops. These loops are less elongated e·lon·gate  
tr. & intr.v. e·lon·gat·ed, e·lon·gat·ing, e·lon·gates
To make or grow longer.

adj. or elongated
1. Made longer; extended.

2. Having more length than width; slender.
 and collapse back toward the sun, dragging with them some of the solar wind's outflowing gas, Sheeley and Wang suggest.

They conclude that the continual restructuring of magnetic fields on the sun--from a highly stretched configuration to shorter, more compact loops--constitutes a regular route by which some gas high in the sun's atmosphere returns to the sun. Although astronomers have for decades observed glowing arches of gas rise and fall in the sun's lower atmosphere, the inflowing clouds begin their descent much farther up, at altitudes as high as about 3 million kilometers, twice the sun's diameter.

The infalling gas clouds are the first visible sign that the stretched magnetic fields are closing back down, explains solar physicist Barbara J. Thompson of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center The Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) is a major NASA space research laboratory established on May 1, 1959 as NASA's first space flight center. GSFC employs approximately 10,000 civil servants and contractors, and is located approximately 6.5 miles northeast of Washington, D.C.  in Greenbelt, Md.

To view these wispy inflows at the sun's periphery, Sheeley and Wang used a coronagraph coronagraph (kərō`nəgrăf'), device invented by the French astronomer B. Lyot (1931) for the purpose of observing the corona of the sun and solar prominences occurring in the chromosphere. , a device that blocks the bright light from the sun's visible surface. Even with this device on SOHO, the researchers could discern the inflowing gas only by subtracting one electronic image from the next, a process that reveals subtle changes in gas movement.
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Title Annotation:Earth-orbiting Solar and Heliospheric Observatory
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Dec 22, 2001
Words:398
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