SOHO stands for Solar Heliospheric
Observatory and it's a mission that was launched by ESA (the European Space
Agency) and NASA, in 1995 to study the sun. The sun is a star and the universe
is made up of stars. But the sun is very close to us. We are able to see the
sun in great detail, so if we understand our sun then that allows to have a better understanding of the rest of the stars and
consequently the rest of the universe.
Well the first time I saw a SOHO image
my reaction was basically... WOW! I was blown away. I'd never seen the kinds of
detail, the kinds of structure, the kinds of dynamics that were going on and
any sort image of the sun before and I think that this is probably true for a
lot of scientist.
One of the ways SOHO studies the corona
is using what we call a coronagraph. And so a coronagraph creates an artificial
eclipse, because the sun itself, surface of the sun, is about a million times
brighter then the outer structure of the corona you need block that bright disk
out so you can see the much fainter outer corona.
Using SOHO and using a technique called
helioseismology, very similar to seismology on the earth, we actually able to
see inside the sun. And so what we were able to do is see the layers of the sun
just below the visible surface that we call the convection zone. And that's
where all sorts of dynamics are going on, the inside of the sun bubbling up to
the surface and that's really where all of the solar phenomena that we see is
first developed and so we were able see underneath the surface and see these
flows of solar plasma see the formation of sun spots. And this is something
that's never been done before. We are actually see the
details inside of a star.
I have been staring at images from SOHO
for months and months and the data was beautiful but then I saw TRACE you got
to see these fine details these tiny loops you just completely didn't even
imagine were there then you see them and it's like nothing you've ever seen. Your seeing details of the coronal loops. In the previous
images you from other satellites it would look like it was one big loop and
when you actually get to see TRACE you see all these teeny tiny finely... they
almost look like threads. And there's these teeny tiny loops
and they are just breaking off and reforming and throwing plasma.
One loop can be vastly different
temperature then the next loop so that has been a big thing. It's helped with
magnetic data. They are able to see that when the loops break off they can see
the way the magnetic field is twisting and so the instruments on SOHO work
closely with TRACE and visa versa so we can use all the data together to better
understand things.