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Solar Wind Squeezes Some of Earth's Atmosphere into
Space
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE ON DECEMBER 8, 1998 AT 10 A.M. PST
Using NASA’s Polar spacecraft, researchers have found the first
direct evidence that
bursts of energy from the Sun can cause oxygen and other gases to
gush from Earth's
upper atmosphere. Space physicists have observed that the flow of
"polar wind"
increased substantially when a storm from the Sun smacked into
Earth on September 24-
25, 1998. In effect, pressure from the solar ejection squeezed gas
out of the ionosphere.
Scientists have known since the early 1980s that Earth’s upper
atmosphere leaks oxygen,
helium, and hydrogen ions (atoms that have gained or lost an
electron) into space from
regions near the poles. But it was not until the Polar spacecraft
flew through this fountain
of ionized gas in September 1998 that scientists confirmed that the
flow of ions is caused
by solar activity.
"We now have direct, quantifiable evidence that disturbances in the
solar wind produce
changes in the flow of ions out of the ionosphere,” said Dr. Thomas
E. Moore of NASA’s
Goddard Space Flight Center, principal investigator for Polar’s
Thermal Ion Dynamics
Experiment (TIDE). “This solar wind energy essentially cooks the
atmosphere off of the
Earth.” Moore’s observations were presented on December 8 in San
Francisco’s during
the Fall Meeting of the American Geophysical Union.
On September 22, 1998, the Sun ejected a mass of hot, ionized gas
(plasma) toward
Earth. This magnetic cloud of plasma (known as a coronal mass
ejection) increased the
density and pressure of the solar wind and produced a shock wave
similar to a sonic
boom. When that cloud arrived at Earth late on September 24, it
rammed into and
compressed Earth’s magnetic shell in space, or magnetosphere. The
shock and pressure
excited the plasma trapped in Earth’s ionosphere to a point where
some ions gained
enough energy to escape gravity and flow downwind of Earth.
The amount of oxygen and other gases lost from the ionosphere
amounted to a few
hundred tons, roughly equivalent to the mass of oxygen inside the
Louisiana Superdome.
“This is the supply of plasma that makes things interesting in
space,” said Moore. “Much
of the gas ejected from the ionosphere is caught in Earth's wake.
It then flows back
toward the Earth while being heated and accelerated by the same
processes that create
auroral particles and the radiation belts.”
The ionosphere is a series of invisible layers of ions and
electrons that are suspended in
Earth's atmosphere at about 50 to 400 kilometers (25 to 250 miles)
in altitude. These
particles are produced when the Sun's ultraviolet light ionizes the
atoms and molecules in
the upper atmosphere. The ionosphere makes long distance radio
communication
possible by reflecting radio waves back to Earth. It also is home
to the aurora and the
electrical currents that heat the atmosphere during magnetic
storms.
“Our research shows that Earth’s own ionosphere is a major
contributor to the growth of
space storms,” said Dr. Barbara Giles, a co-investigator on the
TIDE team and researcher
at NASA-Goddard. “These new observations will help us understand
the conditions that
enable space storms to form, thereby moving one step closer to the
forecasting of the
most damaging storms.”
Prior to the launch of Polar, such observations of ions flowing out
of the ionosphere were
nearly impossible. But the TIDE instrument was specifically
designed to neutralize the
electrical charge that naturally builds up on the surface of
spacecraft due to sunlight
(about 40 to 50 volts). By squirting a small plume of Xenon ions
and electrons, TIDE
offsets the charge on the spacecraft and allows detectors to
observe cold plasmas like the
oxygen ions seen during the September event.