Sun's corona is both hot and kinky
Astrophysicists are having a heated debate over the wave structure of the Sun鈥檚 Corona - a debate which may one day influence solar weather forecasting and the theory behind fusion reactors.
The Sun鈥檚 core is about 6000 degrees C, but its outer layer, the Corona, which is filled with a strong magnetic field, is 200 to 300 times hotter.
Last year American scientists thought they had cracked this paradox with research showing how high-energy Alfv茅n wave structures could super-heat the Corona.
The astrophysicists said they could detect Alfv茅n waves within the Corona 鈥 waves that have a corkscrew motion along the magnetic field at supersonic speed.
They published their results in prestigious journal Science.
However, scientists at the University of Warwick say these are well known and earlier discovered magneto-acoustic kink waves. These, they say, are a better fit for the complex magnetic fields of the Sun鈥檚 outer layer.
They鈥檝e published their results today in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Warwick astrophysicist Dr Tom Van Doorsselaere explains; 鈥淲e interpret the data differently. They think they鈥檙e looking at an Alfv茅n wave, but in fact they are looking at Kink wave.
鈥淜ink waves are a bending of the magnetic field, much alike the bending of the string, when playing the guitar.
鈥淢oreover, because the scientists from Boulder Colorado identified the wrong kind of wave all of their subsequent calculations are out. And, sadly, it means the question of why the Corona is hot remains unanswered.鈥
Source: University of Warwick