ESAHome
   
Space Science
About Space ScienceESA's 'Cosmic Vision'Science & Technology in-depth
Multimedia
Science imagesScience videosAnimationsDownloadsSounds from space
Media centre
Press ReleasesPress kitsESA Television
Resources
Reference sectionGlossaryFAQs
Science missions
Services
HelpLegal disclaimerCommentsSubscribe
Follow us
RSS feedsESA Sci on Twitter
 
 
 
Bookmark and Share
 
 
 
 
News printer friendly page
Solar corona
Solar corona as imaged by Hinode
Hinode’s first images of our violent Sun
 
22 December 2006
Instruments aboard the Japanese satellite Hinode, or 'Sunrise', are returning extraordinary new images of our Sun. The international mission to study the forces that drive the violent, explosive power of our star was launched from Japan on 23 September 2006.
 
Hinode is circling Earth in a polar flight path (a 'sun-synchronous' orbit) that allows the spacecraft's instruments to remain in continuous sunlight for nine months each year. An international team of scientists and engineers is performing the calibration and checkout of Hinode's three primary instruments: the Solar Optical Telescope (SOT), the X-ray Telescope (XRT) and the Extreme Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer (EIS). As part of this checkout, the instruments collected some remarkable images of the Sun.

Hinode's X-ray Telescope has captured unprecedented details in solar active region corona, the Sun's outer atmosphere. The corona is the spawning ground for explosive solar activity, such as coronal mass ejections. Powered by the Sun's magnetic field, these violent atmospheric disturbances of the Sun can be of danger to space travellers, disruptive to orbiting satellites and can cause power grid problems on Earth.  
 
Solar surface
Solar surface as seen by Hinode
Hinode's Solar Optical Telescope has delivered images that show greatly magnified views of the Sun's surface. These images are revealing new details about solar convection. Solar convection is the process that drives the rising and falling of gases in the lowest atmospheric region, the photosphere. In addition, the Solar Optical Telescope is the first space-borne instrument to measure the strength and direction of the Sun's magnetic field.

The Solar Optical Telescope images and magnetic maps uncover highly dynamic, intermittent nature of the Sun's lower atmosphere - chromosphere. It is also providing revolutionary views on various solar phenomena from heating of solar atmosphere to generation of magnetic fields and magnetic reconnection.
 
 
Hinode's third primary instrument is the Extreme-Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer. The instrument has provided measurements of the speed of solar material, along with information that will help scientists diagnose the temperature and density of solar outer atmosphere.

The Extreme-Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer provides a crucial link between the other two instruments aboard Hinode since it measures the layers that separate the photosphere from the corona: the chromosphere and the chromosphere-corona transition region.
 
 
Mercury's transit in front of the Sun
Hinode saw Mercury's transit in front of the Sun
These first calibration images are providing a fascinating preview of what's on the horizon once the science phase of the mission begins sometimes in late December. Once that phase is started, the focus will shift from calibration to using the instruments for making continuous, simultaneous observations of specific solar features.

By performing coordinated measurements with all three instruments, Hinode will help scientists observe how changes in the magnetic field at the Sun's surface spread through the outer layers of the solar atmosphere.
 
 
Note for editors
 
The Hinode mission, known as 'Solar-B' before launch, is led by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA), and involves institutes in the United States (coordinated by NASA), and in the United Kingdom (coordinated by PPARC).

In partnership with the Norwegian Space Centre in Oslo, ESA is providing ground station coverage through the Svalbard Satellite Station, situated on the Norwegian Svalbard islands. This is the only ground station in the world that can receive the satellite data for each of Hinode's 15 daily orbits.

As a result of the ESA/Norway participation in Hinode, scientists from ESA's member states will be given access to the satellite's data. These will be accessible via the European Solar-B Data Centre, which is being built at the Institute of Theoretical Astrophysics at the University of Oslo.

Hinode's operations centre is located at JAXA's facility in Sagamihara, Japan.
 
 
For more information
 
Bernhard Fleck, ESA SOHO and Hinode Project Scientist
Email: bfleck @ esa.nascom.nasa.gov
 
 

 
 
More about...
Hinode (Solar-B) overviewHinode (Solar-B) in a nutshell
Related articles
Solar-B renamed ‘Hinode’ after launchSolar-B – a new solar mission to study the dynamic SunNowhere to hide from SOHOESA’s SOHO will lead a fleet of solar observatoriesHow we see the far side of the SunWhat are solar flares?Scientists weather a space storm to find its originHow the Sun affects us on Earth
Related links
Hinode at JAXAHinode at NASAHinode at STFCBest of SOHO imagesCurrent space weatherESA Space WeatherHinode (Solar-B) launch image gallery at JAXAHinode (Solar-B) launch video gallery at JAXA
 
 
 
   Copyright 2000 - 2012 © European Space Agency. All rights reserved.