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    Home»Space»Researchers Detected a Cool Layer in the Atmosphere of Alpha Centauri A
    Space

    Researchers Detected a Cool Layer in the Atmosphere of Alpha Centauri A

    By European Space AgencyFebruary 20, 20131 Comment4 Mins Read
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    cool-layer-in-the-atmosphere-of-Alpha-Centauri-A
    One of the great curiosities in solar science is that our Sun’s outer atmosphere – the corona – is heated to millions of degrees when its visible surface is ‘only’ about 6000 degrees. Even stranger is a curious temperature minimum of 4000 degrees lying between the two layers, in the chromosphere. Now, using ESA’s Herschel space observatory, scientists have made the first discovery of an equivalent cool layer in the atmosphere of the Sun-like star, Alpha Centauri A. ESA

    By observing Alpha Centauri A in far-infrared light with ESA’s Herschel space observatory and comparing the results with computer models of stellar atmospheres, researchers have detected a cool layer in the atmosphere of Alpha Centauri A.

    ESA’s Herschel space observatory has detected a cool layer in the atmosphere of Alpha Centauri A, the first time this has been seen in a star beyond our own Sun. The finding is not only important for understanding the Sun’s activity, but could also help in the quest to discover proto-planetary systems around other stars.

    The Sun’s nearest neighbors are the three stars of the Alpha Centauri system. The faint red dwarf, Proxima Centauri, is nearest at just 4.24 light-years, with the tight double star, Alpha Centauri AB, slightly further away at 4.37 light-years.

    Alpha Centauri B has recently been in the news after the discovery of an Earth-mass planet in orbit around it. But Alpha Centauri A is also very important to astronomers: almost a twin to the Sun in mass, temperature, chemical composition, and age, it provides an ideal natural laboratory to compare other characteristics of the two stars.

    One of the great curiosities in solar science is that the Sun’s wispy outer atmosphere – the corona – is heated to millions of degrees while the visible surface of the Sun is ‘only’ about 6,000ºC (11,000ºF). Even stranger, there is a temperature minimum of about 4,000ºC (7,000ºF) between the two layers, just a few hundred kilometers above the visible surface in the part of Sun’s atmosphere called the chromosphere.

    Both layers can be seen during a total solar eclipse, when the Moon briefly blocks the bright face of the Sun: the chromosphere is a pink-red ring around the Sun, while the ghostly white plasma streamers of the corona extend out millions of kilometers.

    The heating of the Sun’s atmosphere has been a conundrum for many years, but is likely to be related to the twisting and snapping of magnetic field lines sending energy rippling through the atmosphere and out into space – possibly in the direction of Earth – as solar storms. Why there is a temperature minimum has also long been of interest to solar scientists.

    Now, by observing Alpha Centauri A in far-infrared light with Herschel and comparing the results with computer models of stellar atmospheres, scientists have made the first discovery of an equivalent cool layer in the atmosphere of another star.

    “The study of these structures has been limited to the Sun until now, but we clearly see the signature of a similar temperature inversion layer at Alpha Centauri A,” says René Liseau of the Onsala Space Observatory, Sweden, and lead author of the paper presenting the results.

    “Detailed observations of this kind for a variety of stars might help us decipher the origin of such layers and the overall atmospheric heating puzzle.”

    Reference: “α Centauri A in the far infrared: First measurement of the temperature minimum of a star other than the Sun” by R. Liseau, B. Montesinos, G. Olofsson, G. Bryden, J. P. Marshall, D. Ardila, A. Bayo Aran, W. C. Danchi, C. del Burgo, C. Eiroa, S. Ertel, M. C. W. Fridlund, A. V. Krivov, G. L. Pilbratt, A. Roberge, P. Thébault, J. Wiegert and G. J. White, 10 January 2013, Astronomy & Astrophysics.
    DOI: 10.1051/0004-6361/201220776

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    1 Comment

    1. Pat Nolan on February 21, 2013 9:47 pm

      The temperature inversion cool layer of stars is explainable by a liquid helium core. Protostar cores condense in extremely cold dense molecular cloud filaments, likely a phase change. This core slowly evaporates, as heat is absorbed, and helium gas is released, instead of stars being formed by hydrogen fusion models

      Reply
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