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‘Cold’ solar loops may help solve corona puzzle

A new type of magnetic loop found on the sun might help identify possible explanations for why the corona is hotter than the sun's surface
Plain loopy
Plain loopy
(Image: Goddard Space Flight Centre/NASA)

THE surface of the sun is a pretty cool place. At least when you compare it with the corona, the sun鈥檚 upper atmosphere, which is nearly 400 times hotter.

This huge temperature difference has long been a mystery, but a newly discovered feature of the sun鈥檚 magnetic field may help us get to the bottom of things.

The sun鈥檚 tangled magnetic field includes huge loops that arch from the surface into the corona. We can see the loops because bright surface plasma flows along their curves.

at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, and his team were measuring the temperature of coronal loops during a solar minimum, a quiet phase which sees fewer sunspots and flares. They expected all loops to get hotter with height, since that was the case in measurements taken during more active phases.

Surprisingly, some of the loops nearest the sun鈥檚 equator got colder near their tops. Frazin thinks these newly found 鈥渄own loops鈥 exist throughout the solar cycle and may be a symptom of whatever causes coronal heating ().

at the University of St Andrews, UK, agrees that down loops are a new factor that any solar-heating model will need to include.

Topics: Astronomy / Solar system