Solar Wind



This is an artist's rendering of solar wind coming towards the Earth and its magnetosphere.
Click on image for full size version (121K GIF)
Image courtesy of NASA.
The Sun produces a constant stream of particles which billow out into space. In fact, 1 million tons of particles come from the Sun every second! This stream of particles is called the solar wind.

The solar wind plasma is very thin. Near the Earth, the plasma is only about 6 particles per cubic centimeter, compared to 2.5 10^19 molecules/cm3 in the Earth's sea-level atmosphere. Nevertheless, it is responsible for such unusual phenomena as:

The solar wind consists mostly of protons and electrons, but it also consists of ions of almost every element in the periodic table. It is considered to be the continual expansion of the Sun's atmosphere. It is a remmnant of the T-Tauri phase of stellar evolution when the newly ignited Sun blew massive quantites of its residual mass into space.

The solar wind emanates from the Sun in all directions, but seems to emmanate most readily from the Sun's coronal holes. Exactly what causes the solar wind to be accelerated, or "blown" into space is not well understood. Such phenomenon are being investigated by the SWICS and SWOOPS instruments of the Ulysses mission.

The particles of the solar wind, and the Sun's magnetic field (IMF) are stuck together, therefore the solar wind carries the IMF (interplanetary magnetic field) with it into space. Once blown into space, the particles travel at supersonic speeds of 200-800 km/sec and do not slow down until they reach the termination shock within the heliosphere, where the solar wind slows from supersonic to subsonic speeds. The Heliosphere is the entire region of space influenced by the Sun.

Characteristics of the Solar Wind

What is Interplanetary Space?

Detecting Magnetic Fields with Spacecraft



Solar Wind



This is an artist's rendering of solar wind coming towards the Earth and its magnetosphere.
Click on image for full size version (121K GIF)
Image courtesy of NASA.
The Sun is flinging 1 million tons of matter out into space every second! We call this material solar wind. Once the solar wind is blown into space, the particles travel at supersonic speeds of 200-800 km/sec! These particles travel all the way past Pluto and do not slow down until they reach the termination shock within the heliosphere. The Heliosphere is the entire region of space influenced by the Sun.

The solar wind plasma is very thin. Near the Earth, the plasma is only about 6 particles per cubic centimeter. So, even though the wind travels SUPER fast, it wouldn't even ruffle your hair if you were to stand in it because it's so thin! But, it is responsible for such unusual things as:

The particles of the solar wind, and the Sun's magnetic field (IMF) are stuck together, therefore the solar wind carries the IMF (interplanetary magnetic field) with it into space.

Instruments like SWICS and SWOOPS onboard the Ulysses probe are studying solar wind. They are hoping to make a 3-D map of solar wind characteristics throughout the heliosphere.

Characteristics of the Solar Wind

What is Interplanetary Space?

How We Detect Magnetic Fields with Spacecraft



Solar Wind



This is an artist's rendering of solar wind coming towards the Earth and its magnetosphere.
Click on image for full size version (121K GIF)
Image courtesy of NASA.
The Sun is flinging 1 million tons of material out into space every second! We call this material solar wind. If you add all this material up over the course of a day, it's like the mass of Utah's Great Salt Lake. And this happens every day, day after day, year after year!

We can't see this material coming from the Sun, but we know that it causes:

The solar wind travels very, very fast, and it travels very, very far! The solar wind goes all the way out past Pluto to the heliopause. There are a few spacecraft like Ulysses and Voyager I & II which are helping scientists study solar wind from the Sun all the way out to Pluto.

Characteristics of the Solar Wind

What is Interplanetary Space?

How We Measure Magnetism




Last modified June 3, 2003 by the Windows Team

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