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un:space-physics [2024/09/30 04:25] – asad | un:space-physics [2024/10/03 06:22] (current) – [1.2 Eighteenth-Nineteenth Centuries] asad | ||
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- | ====== Space physics | + | ====== Space Physics |
- | Space physics, or solar-terrestrial physics, deals primarily with the interaction of electric and magnetic fields with high-energy charged particles in outer space. Charged particles from the solar wind constantly ejecting from the Sun create a space plasma throughout the heliosphere. Whether we send or place spacecraft satellites or space stations anywhere in the solar system, everything has to move inside this plasma. Just as you need to know the science of the atmosphere to make airplanes that can move in the Earth' | + | |
- | Before the beginning of the space age, space physics was mainly done by observing and detecting various processes in the upper part of the Earth' | + | The main subject of space physics or solar-terrestrial physics is the interaction of electric and magnetic fields with high energy charged particles in outer space. Solar wind particles constantly ejected from the Sun create a space plasma throughout the heliosphere. Whether we send or place spacecraft, satellites or space stations anywhere in the solar system, everything has to move inside this plasma. Just as you need to know the science of the atmosphere to build an airplane that can move in the Earth' |
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+ | Before the beginning of the space age, space physics was mainly done by observing and detecting various processes in the upper part of the Earth' | ||
===== - History of Space Physics ===== | ===== - History of Space Physics ===== | ||
- | Space physics began because of human interest in two things on Earth: auroras and geomagnetism. Evidence of seeing the aurora existed long ago, but the existence of geomagnetism was not understood before the invention of the compass. There are references to Aurora in the scriptures of many nations of the world. Two and a half thousand years ago, Xenophenes of Greece defined the aurora as a ' | ||
- | There were many superstitions and fears about Aurora. The first scientific inquiry into it began in the seventeenth century in Europe. Galileo proposed that the aurora is formed when sunlight hits the air rising from the Earth' | + | Space physics began because of human interest in two things on Earth: the aurora and the geomagnetic field. Humans first saw the aurora long ago, but the existence of the geomagnetic field was not understood before the invention of the compass. There are references to Aurora in the scriptures of many nations of the world. Two and a half thousand years ago Xenophenes of Greece described the aurora as a ' |
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+ | ==== - Aurora and Geomagnetism ==== | ||
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+ | There were many superstitions and fears about Aurora. The first scientific inquiry into it began in the seventeenth century in Europe. | ||
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+ | In the 18th century Edmund **Halley** hypothesized that the aurora had a relationship with the direction of the geomagnetic field. But the French philosopher **de Mairan** disagreed with Halley, suggesting a sunspot connection with the aurora. Since then, aurora research has been closely associated with the geomagnetic field. | ||
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+ | The first allusion to the existence of geomagnetism is found in an eleventh-century Chinese treatise on the compass. In the twelfth century, books on geomagnetism and compasses were also written in Europe, in which it is said that sailors used compasses to determine the direction of north on cloudy days. By the fourteenth century, many ships were using a regular compass. | ||
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+ | The difference (called **declination**) between the direction of the magnetic pole and the geographic pole varies from place to place on Earth. We do not know for sure when it was first understood. But in a letter written in Europe in the sixteenth century, it is said that the declination of Rome is 6 degrees and the declination of Nuremberg in Germany is 10 degrees. Portuguese navigator Joao de Castro measured the declination of 43 places along the west coast of India and the Red Sea between 1538 and 1541. | ||
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+ | The degree to which the geomagnetic field tilts toward the ground is called the inclination. It is measured with a compass mounted on a pivot, which was probably first made in the late sixteenth century. | ||
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+ | Exactly in 1600 William **Gilbert' | ||
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+ | ==== - The 18th-19th Centuries ==== | ||
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+ | Considerable work was done on the terrestrial part of solar-terrestrial physics by the seventeenth century, but progress on the solar part took longer. Galileo observed sunspots with a telescope, but in the latter half of the seventeenth century the number of sunspots had declined greatly, and no further work could be done on them. | ||
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+ | The 11-year solar cycle shown in the figure above was discovered in 1851. This cycle is related to the Sun's magnetic field. For example, the Sun's magnetic field was very weak during the solar minimum that occurred between 2006-2010. One of the greatest discoveries of space physics in the 18th century was that the compass was constantly moving due to a changing magnetic field. Daily changes in the geomagnetic field were understood through thousands of observations made with compasses in Sweden. The reason for this change is the rotation of the earth on its axis. | ||
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+ | In mid-eighteenth century Sweden, the relationship between the aurora and the geomagnetic field was discovered. And at the end of this century, James Cook first saw the Aurora Australis (Aurora of the South Pole), and twenty years after that, Henry **Cavendish** of England used trigonometry to determine the height of the Aurora from 80 to 115 kilometers. Cavendish' | ||
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+ | Revolutionary changes came in the 19th century. Measuring the geomagnetic field from many places simultaneously begins with magnetometers. A good mathematical analysis of all the collected data was done by Karl **Gauss** of Germany. As a result, it was understood which part of the field comes from below the ground and which part is created high in the atmosphere by the influence of the sun. | ||
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+ | In the middle of this century, Heinrich **Schwabe** of Germany discovered that the number of sunspots on the Sun's surface fluctuated in a cycle of approximately ten years, which we now call the solar cycle. Also, when magnetic observatories were installed in different British colonies, an English scientist analyzed the data from different continents and realized that the geomagnetic disturbance of the earth rises and falls with the solar cycle. | ||
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+ | One of the most amazing events in recent history happened in 1859. English amateur astronomer Richard Carrington observed a large white-light flare on the Sun's surface, and at the same time a magnetic observatory in London observed a major disturbance in the Earth' | ||
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+ | Almost every year there is a total solar eclipse somewhere on Earth. The outer part of the Sun and the corona are best seen during the eclipse. But the problem is that the total eclipse lasts only a few minutes which is not long enough to understand the activity on the Sun's surface. The Coronal Mass Ejection (CME) that Carrington actually observed was discovered only after the invention of the coronagraph. Corona can be well observed by creating an artificial eclipse by covering the surface of the sun with this device. | ||
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+ | Another great discovery of the 19th century was that of Arctic explorer John Franklin. He realized that the aurora is not uniform all the way to the poles. Now we know that the aurora is most common in the auroral zone, an oval band encircling the pole 20-25 degrees from the magnetic pole. This is best illustrated by the animation of Jupiter' | ||
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+ | JJ Thomson discovered the electron in the last decade of this century. Norwegian space physicist Kristian **Birkeland**, | ||
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+ | ==== - Ionosphere ==== | ||
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+ | The electrically conductive region approximately 100 km above the ground is called the ionosphere. Here the conductivity is much higher because there is less particle-to-particle collision. Scottish meteorologist Balfour Stewart' | ||
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+ | Electrical engineers began to contribute to this field in the early 20th century. The radio signals that Marconi sent across the Atlantic were interpreted by Kennelly and Heaviside in 1902 through the ionosphere. Two scientists in the United States measured the altitude or height of the ionosphere by sending radio signals straight up from Earth and measuring the signals that were reflected back; This method is still used, it is called radio sounding. | ||
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+ | The electron density in each layer of the ionosphere is different, which can be measured by reflected radio signals. In this way, three regions named D, E, F have been found starting from approximately 60, 90 and 110 km height. A few hundred electrons are available per cc in the D region, a few thousand in the E region, and a few hundred thousand in the F region. | ||
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+ | In addition, as spectroscopy improved in the 20th century, attempts to understand the **color of the aurora** continued. If an oxygen molecule near the ground is excited (excited) before giving off any radiation, it collides with another molecule and becomes de-excited (relaxed), unable to emit light. But at a height of 200 km, the number of atoms is so low that the excited atom starts radiating at a certain frequency, in a certain color, before any other atom can relieve its excitation. That is why the aurora has so many colors. In the aurora below 100 km above the ground, the red-blue light of nitrogen is greater, between 100 and 250 km the green of oxygen is greatest, and above 250 km the red line of oxygen is greater. Auroras are mainly caused by electrons, but in 1939 the first proton auroras were also observed. | ||
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+ | In the 1880s, a type of audio wave known as a ' | ||
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+ | Just as there is astronomy for the study of the entire universe outside the earth' | ||
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+ | ==== - Magnetosphere ==== | ||
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+ | Extending far beyond the upper part of the ionosphere is our magnetosphere, | ||
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+ | A pair of positive-negative charges from the Sun is seen as a magnetic dipole in the Earth' | ||
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+ | The boundary between the Earth' | ||
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+ | Thomas Gold, who coined the name ' | ||
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+ | The bow shock changes the nature of the solar wind. Earth' | ||
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+ | ==== - Solar Wind ==== | ||
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+ | The importance of the Sun's magnetic field was first well understood in 1908, when George Hale developed the solar magnetograph. The Sun's magnetic field causes particles in its wind to accelerate, and this acceleration causes our auroras. In Chapman' | ||
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+ | An astronomer observed in 1943 that a comet' | ||
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+ | Accepting the solar magnetic field also solves a problem of the terrestrial magnetic field. A few days after an eruption on the Sun, the Earth' | ||
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+ | In the 1950s, after analyzing the effect of the solar wind on Earth, it was said that this wind spread across the solar system should not contain more than 30 electrons per cc. In the 1960s, the Soviet Luna mission measured the density and magnetic field of this wind for the first time. And the US Mariner 2 mission launched the first interplanetary space probe en route to Venus. | ||
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+ | Large amounts of energy are occasionally released from the magnetized plasma of the Sun and Earth; In the case of the Sun, they are called solar flares, in the case of Earth, substorms or geomagnetic storms. This released energy is first stored by the magnetic field. Exactly how was not known until the 1960s. In the 1940s, a solar scientist found some neutral points at the site of solar flares, created by reconnection. It was one of his postdocs who fully discovered the process of energy release through reconnection in 1961. | ||
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+ | {{youtube> | ||
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+ | As shown in the video, the solar wind can drag some of the magnetized plasma in our magnetosphere from the dayside (where the Sun is) to the nightside, and on the nightside the plasma and field lines can join the two previously separated lines together, called reconnection. During this time, a lot of energy is released through the conversion of magnetic energy into kinetic and other energies. If they are small, they are called substorms, and if they are large, they are called geomagnetic storms. | ||
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+ | ==== - Interplanetary Voyage ==== | ||
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+ | The solar wind continues throughout the solar system until the heliopause, where the interstellar wind meets the solar wind. In between, the solar wind faces many obstacles. Each planet has a different magnetosphere. | ||
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+ | In the 1960s, humans set foot on the moon. Analysis of rocks brought back from the Moon by the Apollo missions between 1969 and 1973 revealed that the lunar crust is magnetic, while the core is conductive. But the moon has no atmosphere. The first probes sent into deep space, Mariner 2, 4 and 5, went to Mars and Venus, which have atmospheres, | ||
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+ | Ultraviolet radiation from the Sun heats the outer atmospheres of Venus and Mars to form a neutral layer, called the exosphere, which mixes with the solar wind. The pressure of the planet' | ||
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+ | In the 1970s, Mariner 10 visited Mercury and found a mini-magnetosphere, | ||
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+ | In 1990, the Ulysses mission went to Jupiter not to use the planet as a sling to go further, but to climb up under Jupiter' | ||
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+ | {{https:// | ||
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+ | Not much is known about a planet on a flyby mission. Orbiters have to be placed around the planet to map it. An orbiter was sent to Jupiter in 1995, named Galileo. Currently we can also see the planet' | ||
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+ | Through various orbiters, we have learned that all four gas giant planets have advanced magnetospheres, | ||
- | In the 18th century, Edmund Halley hypothesized a geomagnetic relationship with the aurora. But the French philosopher de Meran disagreed with Halley | + | The field that began as solar-terrestrial physics about five hundred years ago is what we now call space physics. Because we study not only the effect of the sun on the earth, but also the effect of the sun on many other planets, and many asteroids and comets in this field. And we also study the heliosphere |
- | The difference (called declination) between the direction of the magnetic pole and the geographic pole varies from place to place on Earth. Not sure when it was first understood. But in a letter written in Europe in the sixteenth century, it is said that the declination of Rome is 6 degrees and the declination of Nuremberg in Germany is 10 degrees. |
un/space-physics.1727691903.txt.gz · Last modified: 2024/09/30 04:25 by asad