NASA’s IRIS spots Nanojets: Shining light on heating the solar corona

  • Released Monday, September 21, 2020

In pursuit of understanding why the Sun's atmosphere is so much hotter than the surface, and to help differentiate between a host of theories about what causes this heating, researchers turn to NASA's Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) mission. IRIS was finely tuned with a high-resolution imager to zoom in on specific hard-to-see events on the Sun.

A paper published in Nature on Sept. 21, 2020, reports on the first ever clear images of nanojets — bright, thin lights that travel perpendicular to magnetic structures in the solar atmosphere called the corona — in a process that reveals the existence of one of the potential coronal heating candidates: nanoflares.

GIFThese images showing nanojets on the Sun were captured by NASA's IRIS mission on Apr. 3, 2014.

GIF

These images showing nanojets on the Sun were captured by NASA's IRIS mission on Apr. 3, 2014.



Credits

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NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

Release date

This page was originally published on Monday, September 21, 2020.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:44 PM EDT.


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