What exactly is solar wind?

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I’ve heard the term “solar wind” being used in a variety of scenarios related to space. Since wind isn’t possible in space, what exactly is solar wind and how is it caused?

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4 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s high energy charged particles (plasma) getting flung out from the sun. It’s caused by the magnetic field of the sun rotating, which flings plasma out from the corona (solar atmosphere)

Anonymous 0 Comments

Solar wind is what we call plasma that is emitted from the surface of the sun. It’s not at all like wind we have on earth, as you pointed out, no air in space means no wind. It just moves in a wave away from the sun like wind. HOW it happens is not fully understood. It’s known that the thermal energy of the plasma/particles plays a part (the sun is famously pretty toasty), but it’s also thought the magnetic field of the sun plays a part.

Unfortunately it can’t be fully broken down for a 5 year old because scientists are still working it out

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s a bunch of charged particles being shot off constantly by the Sun. This is different from a solar flare or coronal mass ejection (CME).

It’s essentially just nuclear radiation coming from the Sun. When it hits the Earth’s magnetic field, the charged particles get pushed by the Lorentz force (F=qv×B) and the particles get directed towards the poles. When they hit the atmosphere, they release a ton of energy in the form of light, creating the Aurora Borealis (and the Aurora Australis).

During a solar maximum (a time when there is more solar activity), there are more solar winds produced, and more solar storms, the Aurora Borealis can reach further away from the poles than normal. The solar cycle is 11 years long, and the next one is in July 2025.

A solar flare is when a magnetic field loop streams particles in an arch shape out of the surface of the sun.

A coronal mass ejection is when a solar flare rapidly collapses (this doesn’t happen every time a solar flare happens), and it flings a bunch of matter from the sun into space. Usually, this doesn’t get anywhere near the Earth (because the Earth is so small in comparison). In 1859, one of these hit the Earth, resulting in what we call the Carrington Event. Telegraph wires caught fire, and the Auroras were visible all over the world. If a similar event happened today, most technology would be destroyed.

A solar storm is just any elevated activity on the sun. This could include sunspots, solar flares, or CMEs.

Anonymous 0 Comments

It’s literally just a wind that comes from the sun, it’s actually pretty self explanatory. In space, it is not a perfect vacuum, there are particles all over the place. The solar wind is a part of this. The sun sheds plasma and pushes it away at tremendous speeds constantly (because of magnetic fields, radiation pressure, thermal velocities, etc), and this, along with radiation pressure, do in fact push on things. Since the solar wind is a plasma, it’s charged, and thus can be very damaging to sensitive equipment, even apart from the sheer velocity of it.