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Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory & Southampton University Our life-giving star: the flow of energy from the Sun to the Earth BA Festival of Science, York, Monday 10 th September 2007 How the Sun Influences Modern Life
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Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory & Southampton University

Jan 13, 2016

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How the Sun Influences Modern Life. Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory & Southampton University Our life-giving star: the flow of energy from the Sun to the Earth BA Festival of Science, York, Monday 10 th September 2007. How the Sun Influences Modern Life. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Mike Lockwood

STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory & Southampton University

Our life-giving star: the flow of energy from the Sun to the Earth

BA Festival of Science, York, Monday 10th September 2007

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Page 2: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Galactic Cosmic Rays

Solar Energetic Particles

Satellite Damage

Human Spaceflight Hazards

Sun and Climate Change

Page 3: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Galactic Cosmic Rays

Solar Energetic Particles

Satellite Damage

Human Spaceflight Hazards

Sun and Climate Change

Page 4: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

The Solar Wind Plasma

A Coronograph is a man-made eclipse with an occulting disc

blocking out the visible surface of the Sun (the Photosphere).

Allows us to observe the hot solar atmosphere, the Corona

Continuous outflow of ionised gas (“plasma”), The Solar

Wind, 1014 kg per day

Events CMEs eject ~1013 kg at about 350 km s-1

(PS watch the comet!)

Page 5: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

The “Frozen-in flux” Theorem

Charged particle motions

Magnetic Field

B

( by definition of B )

Lorentz ForceB

B

Page 6: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Emergence of Coronal Magnetic Flux

Loops of magnetic flux

emerge through the surface in

active (sunspot) regions

Some of this flux is “open” rises through

the corona and is frozen-in to the solar wind

outflow

Page 7: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Page 8: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 9: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 10: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 11: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 12: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 13: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 14: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 15: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 16: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 17: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Solar wind flow is radial

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Field is “frozen-in” to the solar wind flow

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 18: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Interplanetary scintillation is the “twinkling” if radio stars caused by irregularities in the solar wind Tomographic reconstructionfrom interplanetary scintillations

Solar rotation and radial solar wind generates a Parker spiral field structure

Co-rotates with the solar corona (every 27 days in Earth’s frame)

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 19: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

A Stellar Heliosphere

interstellar wind

bow shock

heliopause

heliosheath

Hubble observations of the heliosheath behind the bow shock where the heliosphere of LL Ori heliosphere meets its (dense) local interstellar wind in the Orion nebula

Page 20: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Galactic Cosmic Rays

The coronal source flux is dragged out by the solar wind flow to

give the heliospheric

field which shields Earth from galactic cosmic rays

Page 21: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Cosmic Rays Anticorrelation with sunspot numbers

Sunspot Number

Huancauyo – Hawaii neutron monitor counts

(>13GV)

Climax neutron monitor counts

(>3GV)

Page 22: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

A Stellar HeliosphereCosmic ray tracks in a bubble chamber

Page 23: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Galactic Cosmic Rays

Solar Energetic Particles

Satellite Damage

Human Spaceflight Hazards

Sun and Climate Change

Page 24: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Solar Energetic Protons(SEPs)

Energised at the shock fronts of CMEs (and CIRs)

Follow heliospheric field lines

Seen here striking the imager CCD plate of the LASCO coronograph on the SoHO spacecraft

Page 25: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

Page 26: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Sun

SEPs generated at front of CMEs

Guided along IMF

Parker Spiral(an example of frozen-in)

CME

Page 27: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Galactic Cosmic Rays

Solar Energetic Particles

Satellite Damage

Human Spaceflight Hazards

Sun and Climate Change

Page 28: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Spacecraft Damage

spacecraft

penetrating radiation

electronics box

sensitive component

charge buried in insulator can discharge

floating circuit trace can collect charge and

discharge

radiation environment damage:

Surface charging 0.1 – 100 keV electrons

Single event upsets MeV ions

Cumulative radiation dose Limits spacecraft lifetime

Internal charging (“deep dielectric charging”)

MeV electrons

Page 29: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Tomographic reconstruction from interplanetary scintillations

The Bastille Day Storm CMEs seen by IPS

Page 30: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

► Ground-level enhancement (GLE) of solar energetic particles seen between Forbush decreases of galactic cosmic rays caused by shielding by the two CMEs

► Here seen at stations in both poles (McMurdo and Thule)

Neutron Monitor counts

Forbush decrease caused by 1st CME

GLEForbush decrease caused by

CME associated with GLE

nm

co

un

ts

The Bastille Day Storm GCRs and SEPs

Page 31: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

▲▼ = Single event upsets (SEUs) suffered by satellites in geostationary and high altitude orbits

several satellites were powered down to protect them

The Bastille Day Storm SEPs seen at Geostationary Orbit

Page 32: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Galactic Cosmic Rays

Solar Energetic Particles

Satellite Damage

Human Spaceflight Hazards

Sun and Climate Change

Page 33: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

BIOLOGICAL EFFECTSBIOLOGICAL EFFECTS

Heavy ions

breaks molecular links

&

can cause nuclear reactions so (e.g.) C converted to N and O in molecules

Page 34: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

The Apollo Missions

Page 35: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Above annual dose

Above annual dose

SEPs: just how lucky were the lunar astronauts?

SEPs during the era of the Apollo Missions

Raised cancer risk

Raised cancer risk

Severe radiation sickness

Severe radiation sickness

Instantly fatal

Instantly fatal

Average annual dose at Earth’s surface

Max. annual dose for a radiation worker

Page 36: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

SEPs: what’s the space weather been like?

Above annual doseRaised cancer risk

Severe radiation sickness

Instantly fatal

SEPs and Galactic cosmic rays since the Apollo Missions

Page 37: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

How the Sun Influences Modern Life

Galactic Cosmic Rays

Solar Energetic Particles

Satellite Damage

Human Spaceflight Hazards

Sun and Climate Change

Page 38: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Total Solar Irradiance

best composite of observations (by PMOD, Davos)

shows 0.1% solar cycle variation

damped out by large thermal capacity of Earth’s oceans but are there century- scale changes which would not be damped?

Page 39: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Total solar irradiance changes and magnetic field emergence

Dark sunspots and bright faculae are where magnetic field threads the solar surface

Page 40: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

TSI reconstructions

Open Solar Flux, FS

TSI (for 3 assumptions for the Maunder Minimum)

A. [Fp]MM = [Fp]now

B. [Fp]MM = 0

C. [Fp]MM = [Fp]now /2

Page 41: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University

Recent trends - revealed by averaging over solar cycle length, L

► sunspot number, R

► FS from IMF data

► GCR counts C (Climax n.m.)

► PMOD composite of TSI data

► solar cycle length, L

running mean over T=[9:(1/4):13] yrs

running mean over T=L yrs

Page 42: Mike Lockwood STFC/Rutherford Appleton Laboratory  & Southampton University