Sep 14,
2006
Parallel Auroras
The nature of auroras
was the subject of a debate that began early in the 20th
century. But later in the same century, our space probes
settled the debate in favor of the electrical theorists
Kristian Birkeland and Hannes Alfvén.
One of the
conflicts in early 20th Century astronomy was between Sydney
Chapman and Hannés Alfvén. Alfvén, following Birkeland's
lead, believed the auroras to be powered by charged
particles from the Sun. Chapman developed a mathematically
elegant theory showing that the auroras were generated
entirely in the Earth's magnetosphere by buffeting of the
solar wind. Chapman refused to give Alfvén's ideas a
hearing. At conferences, rather than address particular
points of the theory, Chapman would state that he and his
colleagues disagreed with Alfvén and that a paper explaining
it all was in process. On one occasion, when Chapman was a
guest of Alfvén's in Sweden, Alfvén built a replica of
Birkeland's terrella experiment, which produced auroras on a
magnetized sphere suspended in a vacuum. Alfvén hoped that
if Chapman could see how plasma behaves in the laboratory,
he would be more amenable to discussing it. Chapman refused
to look at the experiment.
But eventually,
in the late 60's and early 70's, space probes did show that
Birkeland and Alfvén were right -- the auroras are caused by
charged particles flowing from the Sun. Solar plasma does
enter the Earth's magnetospheric bubble. And today we have
websites that monitor solar observations and predict when
and where to look for auroras. During a geomagnetic storm in
2001, the Polar Mission took the above photos (see link to
view the video version) of the north and south auroras at
the same time, here projected on a globe. This project
showed that the two phenomena brighten and dim together as a
near-mirror image.
This shows
that the Earth is no longer an isolated body in space. It is
connected to the circuitry of the Sun, and from there to the
circuitry of the galaxy and beyond. It provides us with a
preview of the discoveries of the future.
Link to press release and animation:
http://www.gsfc.nasa.gov/topstory/20011025aurora.html
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