Solar Orbiter makes first ever observations of Suns south pole, reveals messy  magnetic field
Date:
Sun, 15 Jun 2025 22:01:57 +0000
Description:
Following a flyby of Venus in February that successfully increased its 
orbital inclination around the The post Solar Orbiter makes first ever  observations of Suns south pole, reveals messy magnetic field appeared first  on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Following a flyby of Venus in February that successfully increased its 
orbital inclination around the Sun, the European Space Agencys Solar Orbiter  recently imaged the Suns poles for the first time. The images are the first 
to show how the Suns immense magnetic field interacts at its poles, and will  improve scientists understanding of the solar cycle and solar weather. 
While the images are the first of the solar poles ever taken, they are not 
the last. Over the next five years, Solar Orbiters orbit will continue to  increase in inclination, giving scientists unparalleled views of the Suns  northern and southern poles. 
 
Given the location of Earth and the other planets within the Suns ecliptic  plane, every photograph ever taken of the Sun is taken facing directly at the  solar equator. Solar Orbiter is the first spacecraft to ever significantly  shift the inclination of its heliocentric orbit beyond the ecliptic plane.  This shift in inclination  17 degrees to be exact  allowed its cameras to 
view the Suns south pole for the first time. 
 
The Sun is our nearest star, giver of life and potential disruptor of modern  space and ground power systems, so it is imperative that we understand how it  works and learn to predict its behaviour. These new, unique views from our  Solar Orbiter mission are the beginning of a new era of solar science, said  Prof. Carole Mundell, who serves as the Director of Science for the European  Space Agency (ESA). See Also Solar Orbiter Updates Space Science Coverage NSF  Shop Click Here to Join L2 
Solar Orbiter first got a glimpse of the south pole on March 16 when it was 
15 degrees below the solar equator. Throughout the following day, the  spacecraft imaged the south pole through a variety of filters as part of the  missions first high-angle observation campaign, which continued until Solar  Orbiter reached its maximum orbital inclination of 17 degrees. 
The spacecraft used three of its instruments to capture the images and  measurements. The Polarimetric and Helioseismic Imager (PHI) provides  high-resolution and full-disk measurements of the Suns photospheres vector  magnetic field. The Extreme Violet Imager (EUI) provides imagery of the  atmospheric layers of the photosphere, or the layer of a stars outer  atmosphere from which light is radiated. Lastly, the Spectral Imaging of the  Coronal Environment (SPICE) instrument collects extreme ultraviolet imagery  and spectroscopic measurements of the plasma properties of the Suns corona. 
We didnt know what exactly to expect from these first observations  the Suns  poles are literally terra incognita, says PHI instrument team lead Prof. Sami  Solanki of the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research in Germany.  Diagram showing Solar Orbiters suite of instruments. (Credit: ESA) 
For the first high-angle observation program, PHI imaged the Sun in visible  light and mapped its surface magnetic field, EUI imaged the Sun in 
ultraviolet light and its corona, and SPICE imaged light radiating from  charged gas of varying temperatures above the Suns surface. 
The observations made by the three instruments highlighted how material moves  within the Suns outer layers and could reveal polar vortices similar to those  seen at Saturns poles. Furthermore, observing the Suns polar regions will  reveal more about the Suns intense magnetic field and why it flips every 11  years. Solar activity usually peaks when this magnetic field flips, but  current models struggle to predict exactly when the Sun will reach its most  active state and how powerful its peak will be. 
One such discovery made regarding the Suns magnetic field is that, at the  solar south pole, the Suns magnetic field is quite a mess. Measurements from  PHI showed that both north and south polarity magnetic fields are present at  the south pole. Normally, planetary poles will feature one of the two  polarities, not both. PHI data showing the messy magnetic field at the solar  south pole. Each red and blue patch indicated a different magnetic polarity.  (Credit: ESA/NASA/Solar Orbiter/PHI Team/J. Hirzberger (MPS)) 
Interestingly, however, this mess only briefly occurs during a solar maximum,  when the Suns magnetic field flips and is at its most active state. Given 
that the Sun reached its most recent solar maximum in October 2024 and will  continue to stay highly active until September or October, the observations  were not unexpected. After the magnetic field flips and the Suns activity  begins to die down, a single polarity will build up and take over at each of  the Suns poles. The magnetic field will reach its most orderly state in five  to six years, when the Sun reaches its solar minimum. 
How exactly this build-up occurs is still not fully understood, so Solar  Orbiter has reached high latitudes at just the right time to follow the whole  process from its unique and advantageous perspective, Solanki said. 
PHIs observations and mapping of the Suns magnetic field further highlighted  the complexity of the magnetic field at solar maximum. The strongest magnetic  fields were identified in two large bands on either side of the Suns equator.  Furthermore, multiple sunspots were noted in the PHI data, or regions where  the magnetic field is heavily concentrated on the Suns surface. PHIs complete  map of the Suns magnetic field. The darker the shade of red or blue, the  stronger the magnetic field. (Credit: ESA/NASA/Solar Orbiter/PHI Team/J.  Hirzberger (MPS)) 
While PHI mapped the Suns magnetic field, SPICE was busy measuring the  spectral lines emitted by chemical elements  such as hydrogen, carbon, and  oxygen  within the solar surface, revealing what happens in different  atmospheric layers above the Suns surface. Whats more, the SPICE team  successfully performed a Doppler measurement with the instrument for the 
first time, during which SPICE precisely tracked spectral lines to measure 
the velocities of clumps of solar material. 
The team performed multiple Doppler measurements during the first high-angle  observations, creating a velocity map that revealed how solar material moves  at different layers of the Suns atmosphere. 
These measurements can reveal how solar material is ejected from the Sun  during coronal mass ejections and other solar events. The ejected solar  material, then known as solar wind, is responsible for the incredible aurora  light shows we see on Earth, Jupiter, Mars, and many other planets.  Investigating the origins of solar wind is one of Solar Orbiters key  scientific objectives, and the latest polar observations are just the first 
of many that will reveal more about solar wind and how it is created. SPICEs  velocity map of the Suns south pole. The red and blue colors represent the  different motions of material, with red highlighting material moving away 
from Solar Orbiter. (Credit: ESA/NASA/Solar Orbiter/SPICE Team/M. Janvier  (ESA)/J. Plowman (SwRI)) 
Doppler measurements of solar wind setting off from the Sun by current and  past space missions have been hampered by the grazing view of the solar 
poles. Measurements from high latitudes, now possible with Solar Orbiter, 
will be a revolution in solar physics, says SPICE team leader Frdric Auchre 
of the University of Paris-Saclay in France. 
All of these findings stem from Solar Orbiters first pass in its newly  inclined orbit. As its orbital inclination continues to increase, so will the  spacecrafts visibility of the poles and its ability to research them. In 
fact, much of the data collected from the first passes has yet to be 
analyzed. Though Solar Orbiter has already completed its first full  pole-to-pole flight, the complete data set of that is expected to arrive in  October. 
This is just the first step of Solar Orbiters stairway to heaven: in the  coming years, the spacecraft will climb further out of the ecliptic plane for  ever better views of the Suns polar regions. These data will transform our  understanding of the Suns magnetic field, the solar wind, and solar activity,  said Solar Orbiter project scientist Daniel Mller. 
 (Lead image: Solar Orbiter image of the Suns south pole. Credit:  ESA/NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI Team/D. Berghmans (ROB)) 
 
The post Solar Orbiter makes first ever observations of Suns south pole,  reveals messy magnetic field appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/06/solar-orbiter-south-pole/
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