The Sun’s Chromosphere

About 45 years ago, when I was a young physics undergraduate, I spent a summer at the Royal Greenwich Observatory’s then base in Herstmonceux. I actually got to stay in Herstmonceux castle for a couple of months. Which sounds very exciting, except my room was actually a small cell in the attic. It was a small price to pay to have the privilege of accessing the wonderful range of telescopes and other equipment that they had.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herstmonceux_Castle

The problem I was given was to develop a computer model of the sun’s corona.

The surface temperature of the sun is about 6,000K. As it’s atmosphere extends out into space, you would expect it to become colder and colder. But the sun’s corona does something different. In fact it heats up to millions of degrees before eventually cooling off. This seems to be quite contrary to the laws of thermodynamics that say that heat should always flow from hot to cold. But in the case of the sun’s corona, the opposite seems to be happening. Even today, I don’t think this process is fully understood. The most popular theory 45 years ago was that it was something to do with the sun’s magnetic field.

I did develop some models, although I think it’s safe to say these were not my greatest academic success. I predicted that the corona was composed of 90% lead. Even then I doubted that this was entirely correct. Fortunately for the world I never went on to become a professional astronomer.

Almost all of the energy that we see here on earth comes from the sun’s “surface”, it’s “photosphere”. Because of the huge density and temperature at the core, it takes about half a million years for the energy generated at the core to perform a random walk to the surface, and then a further nine minutes to get from the surface to us. (The exceptions are solar neutrinos, which barely even notice that the sun exists.)

All the pictures of the sun that I’ve ever posted are of the photosphere. To take pictures of the photosphere you need a really good filter. One that blocks 99.99% of the sun’s radiation at all wavelengths. These are relatively cheap. You can buy a sheet of filter material for a few pounds.

With this filter in place, you can see the sun’s disk and any sunspots that might be present, but that’s about all. In order to explain how we can get better pictures, and more information, we need a little bit of physics.

The sun is mostly a big ball of hydrogen. Hydrogen atoms are as simple as an atom can be, with a single proton at the centre and a single electron in orbit. Left to itself, the electron will occupy the ground state in the atom. It can gain energy, either by absorbing a photon of light, or through thermal excitation – basically bumping into other atoms.

An H atom doesn’t stay excited for very long before the orbit decays back to the ground state. When it does so it emits a single photon of light at a very specific frequency that is called “Hydrogen Alpha”.

This picture is more of a classical representation of an atom. Both the proton and the electron should by fuzzy. And the scale is all wrong. If the proton was the size of a tennis ball, then the electron should be an infinitesimal spec of dust a couple of miles away. But just ignore all that.

The sun’s core generates electromagnetic energy with a very specific distribution of frequencies called “black body radiation”. It may seem odd to describe the brightest object in the sky as a black body, but the name comes from the study of the surface of furnaces that are perfectly black on the inside. The need to explain the measured intensity of frequencies in black body radiation was what led Max Planck to his famous hypothesis of quantisation of energy, but that’s a whole different story.

When this black body radiation from the core reaches the surface it encounters the hydrogen in the photosphere. Most of the energy passes straight through, but when the bits at the H Alpha frequency encounter an H atom, it gets absorbed and raises it’s electron to the first excited state. The atom then decays and emits a photon of energy, again at the H alpha frequency, but it does so in a random direction, some of which is back into the core. The photosphere therefore appears darker at the H alpha frequency compared to all nearby frequencies.

Of course there are other excited states of hydrogen and other trace elements in the photosphere. These all lead to dark bands in the sun’s spectrum. But H alpha is the most important example. The important thing to note is that the photosphere is very bright at a wide range of frequencies, except at H alpha.

In between the corona, at millions of degrees, and the photosphere, at 6000K, there is a thin layer of hydrogen called the Chromosphere. This is hotter than the surface but not as hot as the corona. It’s typical temperature is about 20,000K. This is hot enough to excite H atoms by thermal means which then decay via H alpha radiation. So the Chromosphere actually generates the very frequency that is absent in the photosphere. It is also close enough to the photosphere to share many of its characteristics.

All you have to do is isolate the H alpha frequency and you’ll get a detailed image of the chromosphere and many of the surface features that it replicates. The only catch is, these filters are extremely expensive – of the order of thousands of pounds. There are specialist telescopes with these filters built in, but they’re equally expensive. You can get cheaper, wide band, H alpha filters for nebula photography, but they just won’t do for solar imaging. (I’ve tried – you just get a red picture of the sun.)

If you want to use a reflector telescope, like mine, you also have to block out most of the other energy from the sun, particularly infrared, before it hits the telescope mirror and starts heating it up. Small aperture refractors are best.

It’s also best to use a mono camera. Most colour cameras are at their most sensitive in green light. H alpha is red.

There is another option. There’s a frequency called calcium K. This is in the ultraviolet and leads to spooky pictures like this.

https://www.sciencephoto.com/media/156348/view/calcium-k-sun

But, you guessed it, calcium K filters are even more expensive.

So if I wanted to take nice pictures of the chromosphere I’d have to buy a new telescope, a new camera and an expensive filter. All to take pictures of just the sun. It would have to be a very serious hobby for me even to consider it. So next time you see an amateur picture of solar flares and detailed surface features, just consider how much effort and expense has gone into it (and how much science has gone into making it possible).

https://astropixels.com/sun/2012/sunha12aug06-01.html

Galaxies and Stuff

I’ve been experimenting with a relatively cheap dedicated astrophotography camera, the Svbony SC311. It’s a self contained camera with wifi and a dedicated phone app, making it very easy to take pictures through a telescope and store them on a removable flash drive. For reasons I won’t go into, I probably won’t be keeping it. However, before sending it back, I did manage to snap a couple of images of the sun and the moon. These are among the most detailed pictures that I’ve taken to date. Here are a couple of samples.

https://mega.nz/file/M1AlTZqR#4ew3LQNWOBuV38Qpnag2o8WDCB7R3YWxlFWqweeEhsU

https://mega.nz/file/xwxEmAAI#ME0g9G-HPXL5yCiY7a0sUkpiMXGlihazm9GIM4Kw3Aw

The trouble with this camera is that, while it takes great photos of the sun and the moon, it takes absolutely terrible photos of everything else. Don’t ask me why. I haven’t got a clue.

For deep sky images I’m now almost totally reliant on my new “smart” telescope, the Seestar S50. It’s just so easy to set it up and them come back inside and do something else, or even just go to bed. This is M51, the “Whirlpool” galaxy. It’s the result of about two hours of stacked images.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whirlpool_Galaxy

You can find this near the handle of the Plough,

For comparison, my previous efforts, that involved a lot of manual picture taking and shivering in the cold, resulted in some much poorer images.

The Whirlpool galaxy is a very popular target for amateur astrophotographers. A much less popular target is the nearby M106. Despite being closer to us than the Whirlpool galaxy, it’s a good bit dimmer and appears to show a lot less structure. I’ve made several attempts to image this over the last month. The picture below is a combination of three nights worth of pictures, totalling about four hours’ exposure.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messier_106

M106 is principally of interest to astronomers because of it’s contribution to setting the distance scale to nearby galaxies. The wikipedia article has some details. If I’ve understood this correctly, it goes something like this. Water MASERs emit radiation at a specific frequency. MASER clouds in M106 are bright enough that their doppler shift can be monitored. This allows their acceleration to be determined. This in turn determines their exact distance from the central galactic black hole. This absolute distance can be compared to their angular separation. From there it’s simple geometry to determine distance. Once this is known, other “standard candles”, such as Cepheid Variable stars, can be more accurately calibrated.

If you look just above M106 in the picture you’ll see a short, elongated, fuzzy blob. This is another galaxy, NGC 4248. The following Hubble image is quite beautiful.

And near the top of my picture, are yet another pair of galaxies, NGC 4231 and 4232. Here are some close up pictures.

https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:NGC_4231

One of the things I’ve mentioned before is that the Seestar isn’t very good at long exposures because it can’t fully compensate for the apparent rotation of the sky (it uses an alt-azimuth mount rather than an equatorial mount, for anyone who’s interested). As M106 is just such a long exposure I thought I’d do a short movie that shows the camera as it struggles to keep the galaxy in view. (You might need to enable insecure links in your browser to see this.) This is about 100x normal speed.

http://www.platitudes.org.uk/m106_edit.mkv

As you can see. I’ve been quite busy over the last few weeks.

Oh, and T Cor Bor still hasn’t exploded.

Comet on the Move

The movement of comet Tsuchinshan–ATLAS is quite obvious from night to night. Here are a couple of images taken last night and the night before.

comet17n18octCtrst

The comet’s now well on its lonely, icy way back to the Oort cloud.

I was hoping to do a fancy picture with the two images merged, but the program I was trying to use kept crashing. So you’re stuck with side by side images for now,

I also tried to get some telescope images last night, but neither the telescope nor the camera would cooperate. The telescope refused to save its alignment, so tended to wander off all over the place. The camera’s focus assist also decided to show a blank screen, so it was nearly impossible to get a good focus. It’s live update screen was also taking ages to update, when I need it to operate in real time. As a result, most of last night’s close ups weren’t very good.

There are days when every bit of technology I touch just seems to break.