Coupling Sun and Earth

The Butterfly Effect, Writ Large

Have you ever heard of the Butterfly Effect? This is part of chaos theory that says a butterfly flapping its wings in Brazil could set off a tornado in Texas. It means that a tiny change in one part of a system can be magnified and ultimately cause something huge elsewhere.  It isn’t limited to systems here on Earth — in fact, scientists are finding out that changes on the Sun can have major effects on Earth’s magnetosphere and upper atmosphere. This is a very important area of study — and one that I touched on in a project we (Loch Ness Productions) did for MIT’s Haystack Observatory about spaceweather.  You can watch the final episode below, where we talk about how all of Earth’s atmospheric layers are coupled together and how a change in one (say from a bout of space weather affecting the ionosphere) can ripple through the system.

As it turns out, large changes in the Sun’s energy output may have a major effect on the thermosphere — one of the upper layers of our planet’s atmosphere. It ranges up from 90 to 500 kilometers above Earth’s surface, and it’s the place where solar radiation makes its first contact with our planet.

Solar activity, courtesy NASA/SDO.

Atmospheric physicists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR)’s High Altitude Observatory and the University of Colorado have found that the solar cycle (keyed to the Sun’s magnetic cycle, which produces varying numbers of sunspots over an 11-year period) has other variations, and these affect the thermosphere. If it isn’t bombarded as much by solar radiation, it cools and shirnks.

As it turns out, the Sun’s energy output declined to unusually low levels from 2007 to 2009, a particularly prolonged solar minimum during which there were virtually no sunspots or solar storms. During that same period of low solar activity, Earth’s thermosphere shrank more than at any time in the 43-year era of space exploration. The current research suggests that the Sun was going through a period of relatively low activity, similar to periods in the early 19th and 20th centuries. This could mean that solar output may remain at a low level for the near future. And, the thermosphere could remain smaller than usual. This is good news for orbiting satellites and the International Space Station — they can maintain their current orbits without encountering as much atmospheric drag. On the other hand, during the current solar “maximum”, when solar activity is expected to be at its highest during the 11-year cycle, the Sun’s outbursts like the ones in the SDO animation above could ramp up unexpectedly, threatening us and our technology.

Learning about how the Sun and Earth interact is an important part of astronomy research. Up until a century or so ago, our knowledge of the Sun was pretty rudimentary. Today, after decades of research using both ground-based and space-based observatories (including radar dishes, GPS signals and other methods), astronomers are getting a better handle on the coupled Sun-Earth system.

To learn more about long-term variations in the Sun’s activity, check out these pages at the NCAR/HAO Web site:  http://www.hao.ucar.edu/research/lsv/lsv.php.

 

Tectonically Speaking

It Looks Like Mars Has Plates!

Remember back in geology class when we all learned about plate tectonics on Earth?  The continents and oceans of our planet ride along on crustal plates that jostle against each other like huge cracked regions in an eggshell, and in some places, dive under each other toward the mantle of our planet.  Those motions set off earthquakes, which you’ve probably heard about along such places as the San Andreas Fault in California.

The interior part of the Valles Marineris on Mars. Courtesy NASA.

Well, for the longest time, geologists and planetary scientists figured that Earth was the only planet we know about with plates.  Except now it turns out that Mars has a very primitive form of plate tectonics that are likely responsible for the formation of the huge Valles Marineris canyon system on the Red Planet.  UCLA scientist An Yin has discovered these plates by analyzing satellite images from the  THEMIS (Thermal Emission Imaging System), an instrument on board the Mars Odyssey spacecraft, and from the HIRISE (High Resolution Imaging Science Experiment) camera on the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter.

Dr. Yin compared what has been found on Mars with studies done in the Himalayas and in California. There are striking similarities between the fault systems seen in these regions on Earth with canyons on Mars, which has a linear volcanic zone typical of plate tectonics.

In particular, the Valles Marineris region on Mars now appears to be an obvious product of plate tectonics, rather than just a crack opening up on the surface of the planet as scientists once thought. Yin suspects that this famous canyon system on the Red Planet is really a plate boundary that experiences horizontal motion. That’s similar to the motion along Earth’s San Andreas Fault, which periodically causes earthquakes.  The two plates divided by the Valles Marineris have moved approximately 93 miles horizontally relative to each other, according to Yin. By comparison, the San Andreas has moved about  twice as much, and the motions are comparable in type.

On Earth, the huge powerhouse of our core and mantle provide energy to move the plates around actively. Mars, on the other hand, doesn’t have as much activity at its core, which means that it likely has fewer plates and motions than Earth does.  This primitive state of Red Planet plate tectonics also means that Mars has quakes, just not as often as Earth does.

These days, Mars exploration is all the rage again, with the daily news and views from Curiosity, Opportunity, and the orbiters at the Red Planet sending back a constant flow of images and data. Discoveries of things like Martian plate tectonics are a natural outcome of all this Mars exploration. Not all discoveries get made overnight. Sometimes it takes years for scientists to get enough data and perspective to crystallize their findings. I’m excited to find out just what else we’re going to learn about Mars now and on into the future!

Speaking of exploring Mars, there’s a nifty 3D exploration of Mars that you can do right at your computer. Check out this view from Mars Day 2 from Curiosity.  I just spent some time playing with it, and I feel like I’ve just come back from a little Red Planet field trip.