Everything about Sunspot totally explained
A
sunspot is a region on the
Sun's surface (
photosphere) that's marked by a lower temperature than its surroundings and has intense
magnetic activity, which inhibits
convection, forming areas of reduced surface temperature. They can be visible from Earth without the aid of a telescope. Although they're blindingly bright at temperatures of roughly 4000-4500
K, the contrast with the surrounding material at about 5800 K leaves them clearly visible as dark spots, as the intensity of a heated
black body (closely approximated by the photosphere) is a function of T to the fourth power. If a sunspot was isolated from the surrounding photosphere it would be brighter than an
electric arc.
A minimum in the eleven-year
sunspot cycle may happen between 2007 and 2008
(External Link
) and while the observation of a reverse polarity sunspot on
4 January 2008 the 1st Cycle 24 sunspot was sighted, no additional sunspots have yet
27 May 2008 been seen in this cycle. The definition of a
new sunspot cycle is when the average number of sunspots of the new cycle's magnetic polarity outnumber those of the old cycle's polarity. Forecasts in 2006 expected cycle 24 to start between late 2007 and early 2008, but new estimates suggest a delay until 2009.
Sunspots, being the manifestation of intense magnetic activity, host secondary phenomena such as
coronal loops and
reconnection events. Most
solar flares and
coronal mass ejections originate in magnetically active regions around visible sunspot groupings.
Similar phenomena indirectly observed on
stars are commonly called
starspots and both light and dark spots have been measured.
Sunspot variation
solar maxima trend of sunspot count has been upward& from the 1960s to the present, it has diminished somewhat.. The Sun is presently at a markedly heightened level of sunspot activity and was last similarly active over 8,000 years ago.
The number of sunspots correlates with the intensity of
solar radiation over the period (since 1979) when satellite measurements of absolute radiative flux were available. Since sunspots are darker than the surrounding photosphere it might be expected that more sunspots would lead to less solar radiation and a decreased
solar constant. However, the surrounding margins of sunspots are hotter than the average, and so are brighter& overall, more sunspots increase the sun's solar constant or brightness. The variation caused by the sunspot cycle to solar output is relatively small, on the order of 0.1% of the solar constant (a peak-to-trough range of 1.3 W m
-2 compared to 1366 W m
-2 for the average solar constant). This range is slightly smaller than the change in radiative forcing caused by the increase in atmospheric
CO2 since the
18th century.
During the
Maunder Minimum in the
17th Century there were hardly any sunspots at all. This coincides with a period of cooling known as the
Little Ice Age.
It has been speculated that there may be a resonant gravitational link between a photospheric tidal force from the planets, the dominant component by summing gravitational tidal force (75% being Jupiter's) with an 11 year cycle.
History
Apparent references to sunspots were made by
Chinese astronomers in 28 BC (
Hanshu, 27), who probably could see the largest spot groups when the sun's glare was filtered by wind-borne dust from the various central Asian deserts.
A large sunspot was also seen at the time of
Charlemagne's death in 813 A.D. and sunspot activity in 1129 was described by
John of Worcester. However, these observations were misinterpreted until
Galileo gave the correct explanation in 1612.
They were first observed telescopically in late 1610 by the English astronomer
Thomas Harriot and Frisian astronomers
Johannes and
David Fabricius, who published a description in June 1611. At the latter time Galileo had been showing sunspots to astronomers in Rome, and
Christoph Scheiner had probably been observing the spots for two or three months. The ensuing priority dispute between Galileo and Scheiner, neither of whom knew of the Fabricius' work, was thus as pointless as it was bitter.
Sunspots had some importance in the debate over the nature of the
solar system. They showed that the Sun rotated, and their comings and goings showed that the Sun changed, contrary to the teaching of
Aristotle. The details of their apparent motion couldn't be readily explained except in the
heliocentric system of
Copernicus.
The cyclic variation of the number of sunspots was first observed by
Heinrich Schwabe between 1826 and 1843 and led
Rudolf Wolf to make systematic observations starting in 1848. The Wolf number is an expression of individual spots and spot groupings, which has demonstrated success in its correlation to a number of solar observables. Also in 1848,
Joseph Henry projected an image of the Sun onto a screen and determined that sunspots were cooler than the surrounding surface.
Wolf also studied the historical record in an attempt to establish a database on cyclic variations of the past. He established a cycle database to only 1700, although the technology and techniques for careful solar observations were first available in 1610.
Gustav Spörer later suggested a 70-year period before 1716 in which sunspots were rarely observed as the reason for Wolf's inability to extend the cycles into the seventeenth century. The economist
William Stanley Jevons suggested that there's a relationship between sunspots and crises in business cycles. He reasoned that sunspots affect earth's weather, which, in turn, influences crop yields and, therefore, the economy.
Edward Maunder would later suggest a period over which the Sun had changed modality from a period in which sunspots all but disappeared from the solar surface, followed by the appearance of sunspot cycles starting in 1700. Careful studies revealed the problem not to be a lack of observational data but included references to negative observations. Adding to this understanding of the absence of solar activity cycles were observations of
aurorae, which were also absent at the same time. Even the lack of a solar
corona during
solar eclipses was noted prior to 1715.
Sunspot research was dormant for much of the 17th and early 18th centuries because of the
Maunder Minimum, during which no sunspots were visible for some years; but after the resumption of sunspot activity, Heinrich Schwabe in 1843 reported a periodic change in the number of sunspots. Since 1981, the
Royal Observatory of Belgium keeps track of sunspots as the World data center for the
Sunspot Index.
Radio communications interference
Solar flares also create a wide spectrum of radio noise; at VHF (and under unusual conditions at HF) this noise may interfere directly with a wanted signal. The frequency with which a radio operator experiences solar flare effects will vary with the approximately 11-year sunspot cycle; more effects occur during solar maximum (when flare occurrence is high) than during solar minimum (when flare occurrence is very low). A radio operator can experience great difficulty in transmitting or receiving signals during solar flares due to more noise and different propagation patterns.
Significant events
An extremely powerful
flare was emitted toward Earth on
1 September 1859. It interrupted
electrical telegraph service and caused visible
Aurora Borealis as far south as Havana, Hawaii, and Rome with similar activity in the southern hemisphere.
The most powerful flare observed by satellite instrumentation began on
4 November 2003 at 19:29 UTC, and saturated instruments for 11 minutes. Region 486 has been estimated to have produced an X-ray flux of X28. Holographic and visual observations indicate significant activity continued on the far side of the Sun.
Physics
Although the details of sunspot generation are still somewhat a matter of research, it's quite clear that sunspots are the visible counterparts of
magnetic flux tubes in the
convective zone of the sun that get "wound up" by
differential rotation. If the stress on the flux tubes reaches a certain limit, they curl up quite like a rubber band and puncture the sun's surface. At the puncture points convection is inhibited, the energy flux from the sun's interior decreases, and with it the surface temperature.
The
Wilson effect tells us that sunspots are actually depressions on the sun's surface. This model is supported by observations using the
Zeeman effect that show that prototypical sunspots come in pairs with opposite magnetic polarity. From cycle to cycle, the polarities of leading and trailing (with respect to the solar rotation) sunspots change from north/south to south/north and back. Sunspots usually appear in groups.
The sunspot itself can be divided into two parts:
- The central, which is the darkest part, where the magnetic field is approximately vertical
- The surrounding, which is lighter, where the magnetic field lines are more inclined.
Magnetic field lines would ordinarily repel each other, causing sunspots to disperse rapidly, but sunspot lifetime is about two weeks. Recent observations from the
Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) using sound waves traveling through the Sun's photosphere to develop a detailed image of the internal structure below sunspots show that there's a powerful downdraft underneath each sunspot, forming a rotating
vortex that concentrates magnetic field lines. Sunspots are self-perpetuating storms, similar in some ways to terrestrial
hurricanes.
Sunspot activity cycles about every eleven years. The point of highest sunspot activity during this cycle is known as Solar Maximum, and the point of lowest activity is Solar Minimum. At the start of a cycle, sunspots tend to appear in the higher latitudes and then move towards the equator as the cycle approaches maximum: this is called
Spörer's law.
Today it's known that there are various periods in the
Wolf number sunspot index, the most prominent of which is at about 11 years in the mean. This period is also observed in most other expressions of
solar activity and is deeply linked to a variation in the solar magnetic field that changes polarity with this period, too.
A modern understanding of sunspots starts with
George Ellery Hale, in which magnetic fields and sunspots are linked. Hale suggested that the sunspot cycle period is 22 years, covering two polar reversals of the solar magnetic dipole field. Horace W. Babcock later proposed a qualitative model for the dynamics of the solar outer layers. The
Babcock Model explains the behavior described by Spörer's law, as well as other effects, as being due to magnetic fields which are twisted by the Sun's rotation.
Sunspot observation
Sunspots are observed with land-based
solar telescopes as well as ones on Earth-orbiting
satellites. These telescopes use filtration and projection techniques for direct observation, in additional to filtered cameras of various types. Specialized tools such as
spectroscopes and
spectrohelioscopes are used to examine sunspots and areas of sunspots. Artificial eclipses allow viewing of the circumference of the sun as sunspots rotate through the horizon.
Since looking directly at the Sun with the naked eye, through binoculars or a telescope is
extremely dangerous, amateur observation of sunspots with the unaided eye is generally done by projection or via using proper filtration. Small sections of very dark
filter glass, such as a #14 welder's glass is sometimes employed. The eyepiece of a telescope is also used in the role of a "projector" to project the image, without filtration, on to a white screen where it can be viewed indirectly, and even traced, so sunspot evolution can be followed. Special purpose
hydrogen-alpha narrow bandpass filters as well as
aluminum coated glass attenuation filters (which have the appearance of mirrors due to their extremely high
optical density) are also used on the front of a telescope to provide safe direct observation through the eyepiece.
Application
Due to their link to other kinds of solar activity, sunspots can be used to predict the
space weather and with it the state of the
ionosphere. Thus, sunspots can help predict conditions of
short-wave radio propagation or
satellite communications.
Don Easterbrook, a Professor Emeritus of geology at
Western Washington University, has claimed that there's a cause-and-effect relationship between sunspot activity and global temperatures on Earth.
(External Link
)
Starspots on other stars
Periodic changes in brightness had been first seen on
red dwarfs and in 1947 G. E. Kron proposed that spots were the cause.
Gallery
Please remember observing sunspots at sunsets without proper solar filters may permanently damage your eyes.
Image:Sunspot 923 at sunset and in solar telescope.jpg|Sunspot 923 at sunset and in solar scope
Image:Sunspot Mirage.JPG|Sunset Superior Mirage of sunspot #930
Further Information
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