UT Arlington physics professor Zdzislaw E. Musielak has been
awarded a three-year, $301,339 National Science Foundation grant to investigate
Alfvén waves in the Sun, a phenomenon vital to understanding Earth’s nearest
star.
“The
Sun is the source of energy that sustains all life on Earth, but there is much
that remains unknown about it,” said Musielak, a two-time winner of the
international Humboldt Prize for his research into the sun and solar-type
stars. “With this research, we hope to explore one of the great mysteries –
what forces fuel the heat of the Sun’s outer atmosphere and the basic physical
processes for creating its magnetic influence on Earth and other planets.”
Alfvén
waves are magnetic plasma waves named after Hannes Alfvén, who received a Nobel
Prize in 1970 for their prediction. Their existence helps explain why the sun’s
corona, or upper atmosphere, is hotter than the solar surface. Understanding
Alfvén waves is also crucial to explaining the speed of solar winds, a stream
of highly-charged particles released into space by the Sun.
The
existence of Alfvén waves has been verified in many laboratory experiments.
Until recently, neither ground-based observations nor space missions could
unambiguously prove their existence on the Sun.
NASA’s Hinodesolar observatory and the Swedish Solar
Telescope recently broke the observational barrier – detecting clear signatures
of Alfvén waves in different parts of the solar atmosphere. The discovery has
triggered extensive theoretical studies around the world.
Musielak
and his team plan to use FLASH code, a publicly available, multi-physics,
multi-scale simulation code developed at theFlash Center for Computational Science at the University of
Chicago.
“Dr.
Musielak is respected internationally for his contributions to astrophysics,”
said Pamela Jansma, dean of the UT Arlington College of Science. “With support
from the National Science Foundation, his new work will help scientists around
the world further their understanding of the Sun.”
Alexander
Weiss, chairman of the UT Arlington physics department, said: “The funding of
Dr. Zdzislaw’s proposal is a strong endorsement by his peers of the high
quality and importance of his work.”
(UTA release. Photo from NASA, an X-ray image of
the Sun)
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