Astronomers record sun’s music

For the first time, astronomers have found that the magnetic field in the outer atmosphere of the sun produces eerie musical harmonies — a discovery that could provide new ways of understanding and predicting solar flares before they happen.
Scientists at the University of Sheffield found that huge magnetic loops that have been observed coiling away from the outer layer of the sun’s atmosphere — known as coronal loops — vibrate like strings on a musical instrument.
In other cases they behave more like sound waves as they travel through a wind instrument. Using satellite images of these loops, which can be over 60,000 miles long, the scientists were able to recreate the sound by turning the visible vibrations into noises and speeding up the frequency so it is audible to the human ear, the Telegraph reported.
“It was strangely beautiful and exciting to hear these noises for the first time from such a large and powerful source,” said Prof. Robertus von Fay-Siebenbürgen, head of the solar physics research group at Sheffield University “It is a sort of music as it has harmonics. It is providing us with a new way of learning about the sun and giving us a new insight into the physics that goes on at in the sun’s outer layers where temperatures reach millions of degrees,” Fay-Siebenbürgen said.
The coronal loops are thought to be involved in the production of solar flares that fling highly charged particles out into space, creating a phenomenon known as space weather.
When the sun’s activity, and thus solar flare production, increases, the resulting “space storm” can have catastrophic results here on earth.

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