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Title: Current and Future Solar Observing Missions


1
Current and Future Solar Observing Missions
  • Tom Woods
  • LASP / University of Colorado
  • lttom.woods_at_lasp.colorado.edugt

2
Outline
  • Introduction to the Sun and Useful Definitions
  • Possible repeat of some information in previous
    talks
  • Brief History of Solar Observations
  • Ground-based observations prior to space era
    (1600-1950)
  • Early solar observations from space (1950-1995)
  • Current Solar Observing Missions (1995-2007)
  • Solar physics (imaging) missions
  • Solar irradiance measurements
  • LASPs Solar Influence Group and Their
    Contributions
  • Future Solar Observing Missions (2008 and beyond)
  • Solar physics (imaging) missions
  • Solar irradiance measurements
  • Homework Assignment

3
Introduction to the Sun and Useful Definitions
4
The Sun
5
Radiance versus Irradiance
I(?)
  • Spectral Radiance, I(?), is the intensity from a
    small region on the Sun
  • Energy units of W / m2 / nm / steradian
  • Spectral Irradiance, E(?), is the solar radiance
    integrated over the solar disk
  • Also called Solar Spectral Irradiance (SSI)
  • Sometimes called the full-disk radiation
  • Energy units of W / m2 / nm
  • Often normalized to 1.0 AU distance
  • Total Spectral Irradiance (TSI) is the
    integration of the solar spectral irradiance over
    all wavelengths
  • Sometimes called the solar constant
  • Energy units of W / m2
  • Often normalized to 1.0 AU distance

E(?)
6
Layers of the Solar Atmosphere
  • Corona
  • Outer layer - hot, low density
  • 0.5 - 10 MK
  • Transition Region
  • Thin transition layer for temperature rise,
    plasma, and LTE
  • 10,000 K -gt 500,000 K
  • neutral -gt plasma
  • LTE -gt non-LTE
  • Chromosphere
  • Warmer layer
  • Photosphere
  • Surface layer
  • temperature 5700 K
  • x 1000 less dense that air
  • Convection Zone
  • Upper 1/3 of Sun
  • Solar dynamo
  • Source of magnetic activity

REF Lean, A.R.A.A., 1997
7
UV Emissions are from Different Solar Layers
8
Solar Variability at Different Wavelengths
  • Various images of the sun from SOHO showing solar
    activity
  • Full-disk images
  • B/W visible light from MDI showing sunspots
  • Red Green EUV images from EIT showing active
    regions and flares
  • Off-disk images
  • LASCO coronagraph showing streamers of particles
    and coronal mass ejections (CMEs)

movie from SOHO web site figures from J. Lean
9
Sources of Solar Variability (surface features)
  • Harvey and White (Solar Phys., 1999) defined
    surface features based primarily on magnetic
    structures
  • Quiet Sun (QS) quiet regions whose radiances are
    usually assumed to be constant, but SOHO-SUMER
    observations have proven this concept wrong for
    the EUV and FUV emissions (Schühle et al., 2000,
    AA)
  • Sunspot (SS) dark regions that appear in the
    photosphere (effects irradiance gt 260 nm)
  • Faculae (F) bright regions in the visible (gt 260
    nm)
  • Active region (AR) very bright regions in the UV
    - above the sunspots also called plage
  • Active network (AN) slightly bright regions in
    the UV (similar to faculae)
  • Quiet network (QN) even less bright regions in
    the UV
  • Coronal hole (CN) dark regions in the corona
    emissions

Ca II K line 6/03/1992
Features Map
Example of identifying surface features from a
solar image
  • Black quiet-Sun
  • Purple active network
  • Lined active region (AR)
  • White brightest AR

REF Worden et al., Ap J, 1998.
10
Brief History of Solar Observations
11
Ground-based Observations (1600-1950)
The sunspot record is the longest ( 400 years)
direct solar observation.
REF http//www.hao.ucar.edu/Public/education/spTi
meline.html
12
Spörer's Law of Sunspot Migration
Spörers relationship of sunspot latitude with
solar cycle activity
13
Early Detections of Solar Flares
  • Routine scientific observations of the Sun began
    soon after the discovery of the telescope in the
    early 1600s
  • Stephen Gary observed flash in sunspot on Dec.
    27, 1705
  • Richard C. Carrington noted visible light flare
    on Sept. 1, 1859 while making routine sunspot
    observation
  • Brightening started at points A B
  • Brightening flowed along sunspot
  • Disappeared at points C D
  • Lasted for a few minutes
  • Drawing from Carrington (M.N.R.A.S, 20, 13, 1860).

14
Early Space Observations (1950-1995)
  • Orbiting Solar Observatory (OSO) series
    1962-1978
  • OSO-1 1962
  • OSO-2 1965
  • OSO-3 -4 1967
  • OSO-5 6 1969
  • OSO-7 1971
  • OSO-8 1975

1950
1960
1970
1980
1990
2000
Sounding Rockets 1947-now
Skylab
Yohkoh (Japan)
Solar Maximum Mission
Orbiting Solar Observatory 8 missions
15
Skylab - 8 Solar Instruments - 1973
corona, coronal holes, bright points, chromospheri
c (active) network, loops, spicules, polar
plumes, prominences
REF http//history.nasa.gov/SP-402/ A New Sun
The Solar Results From Skylab
16
Solar Maximum Mission (SMM) - 1980
  • 4 solar imaging instruments

corona, coronal holes, bright points,
flares, coronal mass ejections (CME), chromospheri
c evaporation
17
Yohkoh (Japanese) Solar Observatory - 1991
  • 4 solar imaging instruments

corona, coronal holes, bright points, arcades,
flares, magnetic reconnection
18
Solar Physics Critical Questions - 1995
  • Coronal Heating Process
  • What heats up the corona to 2 MK?
  • Nanoflares
  • Nature of Solar Flares
  • What causes solar flares and coronal mass
    ejections?
  • Magnetic reconnection in the corona
  • Origin of the Sunspot Cycle
  • What is the basic physical principles that drive
    the 11-year solar cycle (22-year magnetic cycle)?
  • Dynamo (magnetic field dynamics) at base of
    convection zone
  • Missing Neutrinos
  • Why is the number of neutrinos observed about a
    factor of 2 less than predicted?
  • Discovery of muon neutrino oscillations, and
    thereby neutrino mass

REF http//solarscience.msfc.nasa.gov/
19
Previous Solar Irradiance Measurements
  • SSI
  • Visible GOME
  • MUV Nimbus, SBUV, SME, UARS, GOME
  • FUV OSO, AE-E, SME, UARS
  • XUV/EUV SOLRAD, AE-E, GOES, SNOE
  • TSI
  • ERB/ERBE
  • SMM ACRIM
  • UARS ACRIM
  • SOHO VIRGO
  • Solar Irradiance Questions
  • What is the solar cycle variability in the
    XUV/EUV, visible, and infrared ranges?
  • What are the long-term (decade-century) changes
    in the TSI and SSI?
  • What are the spectral variations during flares?

20
Composite Time Series Important for Climate Change
  • Issues in combining data sets
  • Calibration differences
  • Instrument degradation issues
  • Gaps between measurements
  • Factor of 2 difference is found at times in the
    UV range

REF Woods et al., JGR, 2000
21
Are Solar Minima All the Same?
  • Understanding long-term solar forcing on climate
    change depends on understanding how the solar
    cycle minima are changing
  • Some assume NONE
  • Paleo-climate requires SOME
  • VIRGO composite shows small change, if any,
    between SC 22 min.
  • But ACRIM composite shows large increase

22
Current Solar Observing Missions (1995-2007)
REF http//www.lmsal.com/solarsites.html
23
Current Solar Physics Missions
  • Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO)
  • Transition Region Coronal Explorer (TRACE)
  • Reuven Ramaty High Energy Solar Spectroscopic
    Imager (RHESSI)
  • Solar-B (Japan) - renamed Hinode
  • Solar-Terrestrial RElations Observatory (STEREO)
  • GOES Solar X-ray Imager (SXI)
  • CORONAS-F (Russia)

TRACE
Hinode (Solar-B)
SOHO
STEREO 2 S/C
RHESSI
24
SOHO Helioseismology, Corona, Solar Wind
  • In orbit about Sun-Earth Lagrangian point (L1)
  • 9 solar instruments, 3 particle instruments

Helioseismology (surface oscillations used for
imaging the interior of the Sun) Back-side
solar imaging Corona Dynamics Global Waves
(after large flares) Solar Wind and CMEs
(particle outflow from the Sun)
25
TRACE High Spatial Resolution Imaging
  • SMEX with single instrument telescope with EUV
    and FUV filters
  • High spatial resolution 0.5 arc-sec per pixel
  • High time cadence 5 sec usually (lt 1 sec
    sometimes)
  • Not full-disk imager 8 x 8 arc-min region

26
RHESSI Hard X-ray Solar Imaging
  • SMEX with single instrument hard X-ray
    telescope
  • Study high-energy processes of flares

27
Hinode (Solar-B) Dynamic Magnetic Fields
  • Japanese solar mission with 3 instruments
  • Advanced instruments for vector magnetic fields,
    coronal X-ray full-disk imaging, and coronal EUV
    long-slit (spectral) imaging
  • Very high spatial resolution (0.2 arc-sec) for
    magnetic field imaging

28
STEREO Stereographic Imaging of CMEs
  • 4 instrument suites on two identical spacecraft
  • 2 different locations provides first ever
    stereographic imaging of CMEs

29
Current Solar Irradiance Measurements
  • NOAA SBUV (200-400 nm) and XRS (2 X-ray bands
    0.05-0.8 nm)
  • SOHO SEM (2 EUV bands 0.1-50 nm)
  • SOHO VIRGO (TSI)
  • TIMED SEE (0.1-194 nm)
  • SORCE (TSI, 0.1-27 nm and 115-2400 nm)

30
SOHO Irradiance Measurements
  • SOHO SEM 2 EUV bands
  • Transmission grating with Si photodiodes, 15-sec
    cadence
  • 1st order 26-34 nm and 0th order 0.1-50 nm
  • SOHO VIRGO TSI
  • 2 instruments PMO6V and DIARAD

31
NOAA Irradiance Measurements
  • POES SBUV
  • Ozone spectrometer
  • Daily (calibration) solar measurements from 200
    nm to 400 nm
  • Mg II core-to-wing ratio - important
    chromospheric proxy
  • GOES XRS
  • 2 soft x-ray photometers, 0.05-0.4 nm and
    0.1-0.8 nm
  • Reference for X-ray flare classification
  • eXtreme, Medium class
  • small C, B, A
  • 3-sec cadence, but only 1-min and 5-min data
    available

32
TIMED SEE Measures Solar VUV Irradiance
33
Example TIMED SEE Time Series
  • New measurements of the solar EUV irradiance time
    series are providing new results on the solar
    variations, especially important for shortward of
    115 nm where daily measurements have not been
    made since 1981 (the EUV Hole).

REF Woods et al., JGR, 2005.
34
SORCE Measures TSI and SSI
REF SORCE, Solar Phys., 2005.
35
TSI Record Relies on Continuity
Satellite measurements of TSI have been made
since 1978. Current TSI measurements are from
SOHO VIRGO, ACRIMSAT, and SORCE TIM.
36
Solar Variability versus Wavelength
  • SORCE solar rotation (27-day) variability
    consistent with UARS results
  • UARS REF2002 Woods and Rottman, 2002
  • Variability longward of 400 nm is consistent with
    average temperature change of the Planck function

37
11-Yr Solar Cycle Variability in Energy Units
  • Although relative (ratio) variability is small in
    the visible, the visible variations dominate in
    energy units
  • About 50 of the energy change is from the
    visible
  • UV and IR contribute about equally to the
    remaining variations in energy

38
LASPs Solar Influence Group and Their
Contributions
39
LASP Organization Chart
LASP Director - D. Baker LASP Admin. Dir. - C.
Himes
Color Definitions Laboratory Division Group
Assoc. Dir. - Technical T. Woods
Assoc. Dir. - Science B. Jakosky
Administration Division C. Himes
Engineering Division M. McGrath
MOIS (Operations) Division W. Possel
Science Division B. Jakosky
Earth Atmos. Group Lead - C. Randal
Mechanical Group Lead - H. Reed
Accountant Group Lead - A. Perez de Tejada
Operations Group Lead - S. Ryan
Planetary Group Lead- B. Jakosky
Electrical Group Lead - J. Westfall
Planning Group Lead - K. Griest
Admin. Support Group Lead - C. Himes
Solar Influence Group Lead - T. Woods
Data System Group Lead - C. Pankratz
RA/QA Group Lead - T. Taylor
Computer Group Lead - G. Schut
Space Plasma Group Lead - R. Ergun
Assembly Group Lead - S. Bramer
E/PO Group Lead - E. CoBabe-Ammann
Calibration Group Lead - G. Drake
Flight S/W Group Lead - G. Tate
Program Managers Group Lead - M. McGrath
System Engineers Group Lead - M. McGrath
40
Solar Influence Group
41
Future Solar Observing Missions (2008 and beyond)
42
Outstanding Questions in Solar Research
  • New Research Initiatives from The Sun to the
    Earth - and Beyond (2005)
  • What physical processes are responsible for
    coronal heating and solar wind acceleration, and
    what controls the development and evolution of
    the solar wind in the innermost heliosphere?
  • What determines the magnetic structure of the Sun
    and its evolution in time, and what physical
    processes determine how and where magnetic flux
    emerges from beneath the photosphere?
  • What is the physics of explosive energy release
    (e.g., flares, CMEs) in the solar atmosphere, and
    how do the resulting heliospheric disturbances
    evolve in space and time?
  • What is the physical nature of the outer
    heliosphere, and how does the heliosphere
    interact with the galaxy?
  • How do the changes in solar irradiance relate to
    the evolving solar magnetic field, and how do
    these irradiance changes affect the short-term
    space weather operations and the long-term
    climate changes?
  • Areas of Research
  • Solar Interior
  • Quiet Sun
  • Active Sun
  • Solar Wind / Heliospheric Processes
  • Solar Irradiance

43
Future Solar Physics Missions
  • NASA
  • SDO 2009 - HMI, AIA, EVE for helioseismology ,
    EUV images, EUV irradiance
  • Glory TIM 2009 - TSI
  • Solar Probe mission to the Sun !
  • NOAA
  • GOES SXI and SUVI are solar imagers
  • GOES XRS and EUVS are X-ray and EUV solar
    irradiance instruments
  • NPOESS TSIS for TSI and SSI
  • ESA
  • Space Station solar irradiance instruments
    (SOVIM, SOLSPEC, SOLACES)
  • French PICARD 2008 - first solar diameter
    measurements from satellite
  • Solar Orbiter
  • Other Missions
  • Russian CORONAS-PHOTON 2007
  • French-Chinese SMESE 2010
  • Chinese KuaFu 2012
  • Japan, South Korea, India, Canada, Taiwan,
    Brasil, and potentially others are also
    considering future solar missions

44
NOAA Taking Over Solar Irradiance Monitoring
Solar Radiation and Climate Experiment
(SORCE) 2003 to 2010 or longer Solar Irradiance
TSI, 0.1-27 nm, 115-2700 nm
2005
2010
2015
2020
TIMED 2001 to 2010 or longer Solar EUV
Irradiance 0.1-190 nm
45
SDO is Ultimate Flare Mission
  • SOHO, TIMED, and SORCE (and previous missions)
    have observed hundreds of flares but the
    information is incomplete
  • Observations of single, small region on Sun
    (SOHO)
  • Observations of single wavelength at time (SOHO,
    SORCE)
  • Observations with limited time coverage
  • Duty cycle low (TIMED - 3, but simultaneous
    spectral coverage)
  • Time cadence slow (SORCE 5-min to 100-min)
  • NASA SDO mission addresses these issues with
    full-disk solar images, complete EUV spectral
    coverage, 10-sec cadence, and 100 duty cycle
  • HMI vector magnetogram images
  • AIA full-disk EUV images
  • EVE EUV irradiance at 0.1 nm spectral resolution
  • Launch planned for January 2009
  • Web site http//sdo.gsfc.nasa.gov/

46
Visit LASP Clean Room to see EVE and TIM
Instruments
SDO EVE EUV Variability Experiment
Glory TIM Total Irradiance Monitor
47
Homework Assignment
48
Solar H I Lyman-? Emission Line
  • The bright hydrogen (H I) Lyman-? emission line
    at 121.57 nm is an important solar emission for
    both solar physics and solar-terrestrial
    atmospheric research.
  • What is the atomic transition (configurations)
    for the Lyman-? line?
  • See NIST Atomic Spectral Database web site
    http//physics.nist.gov/PhysRefData/ASD/
  • How many LASP instruments measured the solar
    Lyman-? emission line?
  • See LASPs Interactive Solar Irradiance
    Datacenter (LISIRD) http//lasp.colorado.edu/lis
    ird/
  • How much does the solar Lyman-? emission vary
    over the 11-year solar cycle?
  • One can estimate the variations by using the
    Composite Lyman Alpha link on the LISIRD web
    site to view the solar Lyman-? time series.
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