Bengaluru, September 1 (Press Ki Taquat)
Ahead of India’s Aditya-L1 solar mission, a top scientist said the monitoring of the Sun on a 24-hour basis is a must to study solar quakes which can alter the geomagnetic fields of earth.
The Aditya-L1 mission to study the Sun is slated to be launched at 11.50 am from the Sriharikota spaceport on Saturday.
Explaining the need to study the Sun, Professor and In-Charge Scientist at the Indian Institute of Astrophysics (IIA), Dr R Ramesh told PTI that just as there are earthquakes on Earth, there are something called solar quakes – called as Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) – on the surface of the Sun.
In this process, millions and millions of tons of solar materials are thrown into the interplanetary space, he said, adding these CMEs can travel at a speed of approximately 3,000 km per second.
“Some of the CMEs can also be directed towards the Earth. The fastest CME can reach near Earth space in approximately 15 hours,” Dr Ramesh pointed out.
On why this mission was different from other similar ventures, he said, “Though ESA (European Space Agency) and NASA (National Aeronautics and Space Administration) have launched similar missions in the past, the Aditya L1 mission will be unique in two main aspects because we will be able to observe the solar corona from the place where it almost starts. Also we’ll be able to observe the magnetic field changes in the solar atmosphere, which are the cause for coronal mass ejections or solar quakes.” Sometimes, these CMEs damage satellites by “engulfing” them, he said. Due to the discharged particle flow from the CMEs, all the electronics onboard satellites can malfunction.
These CMEs come all the way to Earth, Dr Ramesh said.
In 1989, for instance, when there was a massive eruption of the solar atmosphere, Quebec in Canada went without power for about 72 hours; And in 2017, the Zurich airport in Switzerland was affected because of CME for almost 14 to 15 hours.
Dr Ramesh said once the CMEs reach the Earth, which is like a big magnet with north and south poles, they can travel along the magnetic field lines and then they can alter the Earth’s geomagnetic field. Once the geomagnetic field is affected, it can impact the high voltage transformers.
“So, it is very important to put a centre of observation to continuously monitor the Sun, which is possible from the Lagrangian (L1) point,” he pointed out.