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The Sun is spinning round again by Staff Writers Geneva, Switzerland (SPX) Jun 01, 2022
All was amiss with the Sun! In the early 2000s, a new set of data brought down the chemical abundances at the surface of the Sun, contradicting the values predicted by the standard models used by astrophysicists. Often challenged, these new abundances made it through several new analyses. As they seemed to prove correct, it was thus up to the solar models to adapt, especially since they serve as a reference for the study of stars in general. A team of astronomers from the University of Geneva, Switzerland (UNIGE) in collaboration with the Universite de Liege, has developed a new theoretical model that solves part of the problem: considering the Sun's rotation, that varied through time, and the magnetic fields it generates, they have been able to explain the chemical structure of the Sun. The results of this study are published in Nature Astronomy. "The Sun is the star that we can best characterise, so it constitutes a fundamental test for our understanding of stellar physics. We have abundance measurements of its chemical elements, but also measurements of its internal structure, like in the case of Earth thanks to seismology", explains Patrick Eggenberger, a researcher at the Department of astronomy of the UNIGE and first author of the study. These observations should fall in line with the results predicted by the theoretical models which aim at explaining the Sun's evolution. How does the Sun burn its hydrogen in the core? How is energy produced there and then transported towards the surface? How do chemical elements drift within the Sun, influenced both by rotation and magnetic fields?
The standard solar model However, everything worked fine until the early 2000s, when an international scientific team drastically revised the solar abundances thanks to an improved analysis. The new abundances caused deep ripples in the waters of the solar modelling. From then on, no model was able to reproduce the data obtained by helioseismology (the analysis of the Sun's oscillations), in particular the abundance of helium in the solar envelope.
A new model and the key role of rotation and magnetic fields "It is important for the Sun as for stellar physics in general and has a direct impact on the chemical evolution of the Universe, given that the chemical elements that are crucial for life on Earth are cooked in the core of the stars", says Patrick Eggenberger. Not only does the new model rightly predict the concentration of helium in the outer layers of the Sun, but it also reflects that of lithium which resisted modelling until now. "The abundance of helium is correctly reproduced by the new model because the internal rotation of the Sun imposed by the magnetic fields generates a turbulent mixing which prevents this element from falling too quickly towards the centre of the star; simultaneously, the abundance of lithium observed on the solar surface is also reproduced because this same mixing transports it to the hot regions where it is destroyed", explains Patrick Eggenberger
The problem is not fully resolved If the problem still exists with the new model, it opens a new door of understanding: "Thanks to the new model, we shed light on the physical processes that can help us resolve this critical difference."
Update of solar-like stars Patrick Eggenberger specifies: "This is particularly important if we want to better characterise the host stars of planets, for example within the framework of the PLATO mission." This observatory of 24 telescopes should fly to the Lagrange point 2 (1.5 million kilometres from Earth, opposite the Sun) in 2026 to discover and characterise small planets and refine the characteristics of their host star.
Research Report:The internal rotation of the Sun and its link to the solar Li and He surface abundances
Researchers reveal hemispheric asymmetry of long-term sunspot activity Kunming, China (SPX) May 26, 2022 Ph.D. candidate ZHANG Xiaojuan and Prof. DENG Linhua from Yunnan Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences investigated the temporal variation of the hemispheric distribution of long-term sunspot activity during the time interval from 1939 to 2019. This work was published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. Solar sunspots are the most easily visible structures in the photosphere. They are connected to most activity phenomena, such as filaments, flares and coronal mas ... read more
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