Researchers found that the answer to the 70-year-old coronal heating problem lies in magnetic waves.
Magnetic waves in a polar coronal hole contain enough energy to heat the corona and moreover they also deposit most of their energy at sufficiently low heights for the heat to spread throughout the corona, the study found.
Michael Hahn and Daniel Wolf Savin, research scientists at Columbia University's Astrophysics Laboratory in New York, analysed data from the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer onboard the Japanese satellite Hinode.
They used observations of a polar coronal hole, a region of the Sun where the magnetic fields lines stretch from the solar surface far into interplanetary space.
Moving away from this furnace, by the time one arrives at the surface of the Sun the gas has cooled to a relatively refreshing 6000 degrees.
But the temperature of the gas in the corona, above the solar surface, soars back up to over one million degrees. What causes this unexpected temperature increase has puzzled scientists since 1939.
Two dominant theories exist to explain this mystery. One attributes the heating to the loops of magnetic field which stretch across the solar surface and can snap and release energy.
Observations show both of these processes continually occur on the Sun. But until now scientists have been unable to determine if either one of these mechanisms releases sufficient energy to heat the corona to such high temperatures.
Hahn and Savin's recent observations show that magnetic waves are the answer.
The advance opens up a realm of further questions; chief among them is what causes the waves to damp.
The findings were published in The Astrophysical Journal.
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