PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

NASA's IRIS provides unprecedented images of sun

2013-12-09
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Susan Hendrix
Susan.m.hendrix@nasa.gov
301-286-7745
NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center
NASA's IRIS provides unprecedented images of sun

The region located between the surface of the sun and its atmosphere has been revealed as a more violent place than previously understood, according to images and data from NASA's newest solar observatory, the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph, or IRIS.

Solar observatories look at the sun in layers. By capturing light emitted by atoms of different temperatures, they can focus in on different heights above the sun's surface extending well out into the solar atmosphere, the corona. On June 27, 2013, IRIS, was launched, to study what's known as the interface region – a layer between the sun's surface and corona that previously was not well observed.

Over its first six moths, IRIS has thrilled scientists with detailed images of the interface region, finding even more turbulence and complexity than expected. IRIS scientists presented the mission's early observations at a press conference at the Fall American Geophysical Union meeting on Dec. 9, 2013.

"The quality of images and spectra we are receiving from IRIS is amazing," said Alan Title, IRIS principal investigator at Lockheed Martin in Palo Alto, Calif. "And we're getting this kind of quality from a smaller, less expensive mission, which took only 44 months to build."

For the first time, IRIS is making it possible to study the explosive phenomena in the interface region in sufficient detail to determine their role in heating the outer solar atmosphere. The mission's observations also open a new window into the dynamics of the low solar atmosphere that play a pivotal role in accelerating the solar wind and driving solar eruptive events.

Tracking the complex processes in the interface region requires instrument and modeling capabilities that are only now within our technological reach. IRIS captures both images and what's known as spectra, which display how much of any given wavelength of light is present. This, in turn, corresponds to how much material in the solar atmosphere is present at specific velocities, temperatures and densities. IRIS's success is due not only to its high spatial and temporal resolution, but also because of parallel development of advanced computer models. The combined images and spectra have provided new imagery of a region that was always known to be dynamic, but shows it to be even more violent and turbulent than imagined.

"We are seeing rich and unprecedented images of violent events in which gases are accelerated to very high velocities while being rapidly heated to hundreds of thousands of degrees," said Bart De Pontieu, the IRIS science lead at Lockheed Martin. "These types of observations present significant challenges to current theoretical models."

DePontieu has been culling images of two particular types of events on the sun that have long been interesting to scientists. One is known as a prominence, which are cool regions within the interface region that appear as giant loops of solar material rising up above the solar surface. When these prominences erupt they lead to solar storms that can reach Earth. IRIS shows highly dynamic and finely structured flows sweeping throughout the prominence.

The second type of event is called a spicule, which are giant fountains of gas – as wide as a state and as long as Earth – that zoom up from the sun's surface at 150,000 miles per hour. Spicules may play a role in distributing heat and energy up into the sun's atmosphere, the corona. IRIS imaging and spectral data allows us to see at high resolution, for the first time, how the spicules evolve. In both cases, observations are more complex than what existing theoretical models predicted.

"We see discrepancies between these observations and the models and that is great news for advancing knowledge," said Mats Carlsson, an astrophysicist at the University of Oslo in Norway. "By seeing something we don't understand we have a chance of learning something new."

Carlsson helps support the crucial computer model component of IRIS' observations. The computer models require an intense amount of power. Modeling just an hour of events on the sun can take several months of computer time. IRIS relies on supercomputers at NASA's Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., the Norwegian supercomputer collaboration and the Partnership for Advanced Computing in Europe.

Such computer models had helped design the IRIS instruments by providing a basis for the instrument performance requirements. Currently, they are used for analysis of IRIS data, as they represent the state of knowledge about what scientists understand about the interface region. By comparing models with actual observations, researchers figure out where the models fail, and therefore where the current state of knowledge is not complete.

By filling in these gaps, IRIS observations are helping round out our images of the solar atmosphere. The Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency/NASA Hinode mission provides detailed imagery of the solar surface. NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory offers imagery of what's higher up in the corona. Now, IRIS provides unprecedented information about the crucial layer in between, to finally help us understand how energy moves through the lower levels of the solar atmosphere driving the solar wind and heating the corona.

The IRIS Observatory was designed and the mission is managed by Lockheed Martin. The Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass., built the telescope. Montana State University in Bozeman, Mont. designed the spectrograph. NASA Ames provides mission operations and ground data systems. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, in Greenbelt, Md. manages the Small Explorer Program for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington, D.C. The Norwegian Space Centre is providing regular downlinks of science data. Other contributors include the University of Oslo and Stanford University in Stanford, Calif.



INFORMATION:



For more information about IRIS, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/iris



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Math models enhance current therapies for coronary heart disease

2013-12-09
Math models enhance current therapies for coronary heart disease Equations help explain key parameters of stents that combat artherosclerosis Coronary heart disease accounts for 18% of deaths in the United States every year. The ...

Survey of supposed deep-sea chemical munitions dump off Southern California

2013-12-09
Survey of supposed deep-sea chemical munitions dump off Southern California Preliminary survey reveals trash and 55-gallon drums, but no chemical weapons SAN FRANCISCO, CA — Since World War II, US nautical charts have shown seven "chemical munitions ...

System 90L no longer suspect for development

2013-12-09
System 90L no longer suspect for development The low pressure area known as "System 90L" in the Eastern Atlantic Ocean is no longer suspect for tropical or subtropical development. On Sunday, December 8, System 90L's showers had diminished. The low was non-tropical ...

Mapping the demise of the dinosaurs

2013-12-09
Mapping the demise of the dinosaurs SAN FRANCISCO, CA — About 65 million years ago, an asteroid or comet crashed into a shallow sea near what is now the Yucatán Peninsula of Mexico. The resulting firestorm and global dust cloud caused the ...

Genetic flaw in males triggers onset of liver cancer, diabetes

2013-12-09
Genetic flaw in males triggers onset of liver cancer, diabetes Michigan State University researchers have uncovered a genetic deficiency in males that can trigger the development of one of the most common types of liver cancer and forms of diabetes. The ...

Biomarker linked to aggressive breast cancers, poor outcomes in African-Americans

2013-12-09
Biomarker linked to aggressive breast cancers, poor outcomes in African-Americans ATLANTA — Among African-American women with breast cancer, increased levels of the protein HSET were associated with worse breast cancer outcomes, according to ...

Diabetes identified as risk factor for liver cancer across ethnic groups

2013-12-09
Diabetes identified as risk factor for liver cancer across ethnic groups ATLANTA — Diabetes was associated with an increased risk for developing a type of liver cancer called hepatocellular carcinoma, and this association was highest for Latinos, ...

Potential biological factor contributing to racial disparities in prostate cancer

2013-12-09
Potential biological factor contributing to racial disparities in prostate cancer ATLANTA — Researchers have uncovered a potential biological factor that may contribute to disparities in prostate cancer incidence and mortality between African-American ...

Economic factors may affect getting guideline-recommended breast cancer treatment

2013-12-09
Economic factors may affect getting guideline-recommended breast cancer treatment ATLANTA — Women with interruptions in health insurance coverage or with low income levels had a significantly increased likelihood of failing to receive breast ...

3D printing used as a tool to explain theoretical physics

2013-12-09
3D printing used as a tool to explain theoretical physics Students may soon be able to reach out and touch some of the theoretical concepts they are taught in their physics classes thanks to a novel idea devised by a group of researchers from Imperial College ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

SwRI receives $3 million NASA astrobiology grant to study microbial life in Alaska’s arctic sand dunes

Inequality destroys the benefits of positive economic growth for the poor

HSS presents innovative research aimed at faster recovery after knee surgery at AAOS Annual Meeting

Advancing catalysis: Novel porous thin-film approach developed at TIFR Hyderabad enhances reaction efficiency

Small, faint and 'unexpected in a lot of different ways': U-M astronomers make galactic discovery

Study finds that supportive workplace culture advances implementation of lifestyle medicine in health systems

USPSTF statement on screening for food insecurity

‘Fishial’ recognition: Neural network identifies coral reef sounds

Cardiovascular health and biomarkers of neurodegenerative disease in older adults

Ethics in patient preferences for AI–drafted responses to electronic messages

Patients’ affinity for AI messages drops if they know the technology was used

New ACS led study finds wildfires pose challenges to cancer care

Scientists discover new heavy-metal molecule ‘berkelocene’

Repeated esophagogastroduodenoscopy and colonoscopy in the diagnosis of gastrointestinal bleeding

Over 1 in 3 adults in households with guns do not store all in locked locations

How environmental exposures affect genes and increase cancer risk

Rising CO2 levels: Impacts on crop nutrition and global food supplies

Water movement on surfaces makes more electric charge than expected

People with COPD and arthritis have an increased risk of death

PNAS announces six 2024 Cozzarelli Prize recipients

AMS Science Preview: Data deserts, Federal science, malaria prediction

Microplastics could be fueling antibiotic resistance, Boston University study finds

Microplastics increase antimicrobial resistance

Endocrine Society elects Santoro as 2026-2027 President

Study explores effects of climatic changes on Christmas Island’s iconic red crabs

AI in engineering

Dr. Megan Abbott and the University of Colorado awarded $450,000 establishing a Clinical Research Center of Excellence that will also serve as a second site for SYNGAP1 ProMMiS

Empire Discovery Institute appoints Dr. Ronald Newbold as Chief Executive Officer

Douglas Hanahan, Ph.D., FAACR, honored with the 2025 Pezcoller Foundation-AACR International Award for Extraordinary Achievement in Cancer Research

Mapping DNA's hidden switches: A methylation atlas

[Press-News.org] NASA's IRIS provides unprecedented images of sun