Monday, February 2, 2026
ADVT 
International

'Nanoflares' behind heating of the Sun's corona

Darpan News Desk IANS, 18 Oct, 2014 07:43 AM
    Providing a clue to why the Sun's corona is so much hotter than its surface, a study found that miniature solar flares called 'nanoflares' and the speedy electrons they produce may be the source of that heat.
     
    A solar flare occurs when a patch of the Sun brightens dramatically at all wavelengths of light.
     
    During these flares, solar plasma is heated to tens of millions of degrees in a matter of seconds or minutes.
     
    Flares also can accelerate electrons (and protons) from the solar plasma at the speed of light.
     
    Those speedy electrons also can be generated by scaled-down versions of flares called nanoflares.
     
    "These nanoflares, as well as the energetic particles possibly associated with them, are difficult to study because we can't observe them directly," said Paola Testa from the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics (CfA) in the US.
     
    Using the observations from the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), the team found that IRIS provides a new way to observe the telltale signs of nanoflares by looking at the footpoints of coronal loops.
     
    The team inferred the presence of high-energy electrons using IRIS high-resolution ultraviolet imaging and spectroscopic observations of those footpoint brightenings.
     
    Using computer simulations, they also outlined the response of the plasma, confined in loops, to the energy transported by energetic electrons.
     
    Finding high-energy electrons that aren't associated with large flares suggests that the solar corona is, at least partly, heated by nanoflares, noted the study.
     
    The new observations help astronomers to understand how electrons are accelerated to such high speeds and energies - a process that plays a major role in a wide range of astrophysical phenomena from cosmic rays to supernova remnants, concluded the team.
     
    The study appeared in the journal Science.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    $1bn needed to fight Ebola virus: UN

    $1bn needed to fight Ebola virus: UN
    Over one billion dollars are needed to fight the West Africa Ebola outbreak - a tenfold increase in the past month, the UN's Ebola coordinator has said....

    $1bn needed to fight Ebola virus: UN

    OSCE monitors come under fire at MH17 crash site

    OSCE monitors come under fire at MH17 crash site
    Monitors from the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) came under artillery fire at the MH17 crash site in eastern Ukraine Sep...

    OSCE monitors come under fire at MH17 crash site

    Punjab To Upload Property Details Of Officers

    Punjab To Upload Property Details Of Officers
    Property details of all civil and police officers in Punjab will be put up on the official websites of their respective departments.

    Punjab To Upload Property Details Of Officers

    Indian-origin Girl Killed In Australia Road Crash

    Indian-origin Girl Killed In Australia Road Crash
    An Indian-origin schoolgirl was killed in a tragic car accident in Australia Monday. Aneri Patel, 16, from Kogarah High School, was believed to be waiting at the bus stop when she was hit by a Mitsubishi Challenger, a mid-size SUV, around 11.30 a.m. 

    Indian-origin Girl Killed In Australia Road Crash

    Sikh Free School Opens Its Doors In Britain

    Sikh Free School Opens Its Doors In Britain
    After facing a lot of disappointment in Britain's Coventry schools, members of the Indian-origin Sikh community have set up their own school for their new generation.

    Sikh Free School Opens Its Doors In Britain

    Kerry arrives in Paris for IS talks

    Kerry arrives in Paris for IS talks
    US Secretary of State John Kerry Sunday arrived in Paris after a four-day tour of the Middle East trying to build a coalition to defeat the Islamic State (IS)...

    Kerry arrives in Paris for IS talks