Slices Through the Solar Interior
Scientists using SOHO/MDI data have looked just below the Sun's surface and clearly observed inward flowing material.
The strong magnetic fields in the sunspots promote cooling. Cool material contracts and sinks at speeds of up to 3000 miles per hour. This drives an inward flow, like a planet-sized whirlpool, that holds the sunspot together as long as the field is strong enough. Scientists discovered this using a technique called acoustic tomography - a novel method similar to ultrasound diagnostics in medicine that uses sound waves to image structures inside the human body. Scientists also found that sunspots are surprisingly shallow. Conditions in sunspots change from cooler than the surrounding plasma to hotter than the surrounding plasma just 3000 miles below the surface. The cool part of a sunspot has the shape of a stack of two or three nickels. Sunspot magnetic fields block the flows that carry heat energy up from the hot solar interior. That results in higher temperatures below the blockage and cooler temperatures above. The downward flows mentioned above dissipate at the same depth. With these data one cannot get a sharp enough picture to really explain the details. Understanding sunspots is essential for understanding the 11-year solar cycle, solar flare explosions, and huge coronal mass ejections that affect life and society on Earth.
Visualization from SOHO/MDI data of sunspot substructure.
For More Information
Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
Alexander Kosovichev (Stanford University)
-
Animator
- Alexander G. Kosovichev (Stanford University)
-
Video editor
- Scott Wiessinger (UMBC)
-
Scientist
- Alexander G. Kosovichev (Stanford University)
Release date
This page was originally published on Tuesday, March 16, 2010.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:54 PM EDT.
Missions
This page is related to the following missions:Related papers
(J. Zhao, A.G. Kosovichev, T.L. Duvall, Jr. 2001, Investigation of Mass Flows beneath a Sunspot by Time-Distance Helioseismology , Ap. J., 557, 384-388)
(J. Zhao, A.G. Kosovichev, T.L. Duvall, Jr. 2001, Investigation of Mass Flows beneath a Sunspot by Time-Distance Helioseismology , Ap. J., 557, 384-388)
Datasets used
-
SOHO/MDI [SOHO: Michelson Doppler Interferometer (MDI)]
ID: 96This dataset can be found at: http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov
See all pages that use this dataset
Note: While we identify the data sets used on this page, we do not store any further details, nor the data sets themselves on our site.