Astronomers have discovered a hidden connection between the Sun’s surface and its upper layers that opens new inroads to understand space weather phenomena affecting satellites, communication systems, navigation networks and even power grids on Earth.
The study suggests that the Sun’s upper atmosphere is not isolated from the layers below but instead retains information about motions occurring deep within the Sun, according to information shared by the Ministry of Science and Technology on Friday.
Understanding how plasma and magnetic fields move through the Sun is essential because these processes drive solar activity and influence solar storms and other space-weather events, the Ministry’s statement added.
This study opens a new window for exploring the Sun’s internal dynamics through radio astronomy.
For many years, scientists have known that the Sun has a slow but steady flow of hot gas or plasma that moves from its equator toward the poles. This movement, known as the ‘meridional flow’, acts like a giant conveyor belt that helps transport the Sun’s magnetic fields across its surface.
It plays an important role in controlling the Sun’s 11-year solar cycle which influences the appearance of sunspots and other forms of solar activity. Until now, however, this flow had only been observed in the Sun’s lower atmospheric layers.
Scientists from the Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences, Physical Research Laboratory, Indian Institute of Technology, Delhi, Indian Institute of Space Science and Technology and NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, found that the slow movement of plasma continues much higher into the Sun’s atmosphere than previously known, revealing an underlying link between the Sun’s surface and its upper layers.
The researchers analysed 27 years of radio observations collected by the Nobeyama Radioheliograph in Japan. Their study provides the first clear evidence that the poleward flow exists nearly 3,000 kilometres above the Sun’s visible surface, in a region known as the upper chromosphere.
“This finding provides the first observational evidence that chromospheric flows at radio wavelengths reflect subsurface dynamics, consistent with the ‘magnetic tree’ hypothesis, which links high-altitude motion to deep-seated magnetic connectivity,” the researchers said in their study that has been published in The Astrophysical Journal. The ‘magnetic tree’ hypothesis proposes that magnetic structures extending high above the Sun’s surface are connected to deeper layers in the same way that the branches of a tree remain connected to its trunk and roots.
This discovery is particularly important because, at these heights, the Sun’s magnetic field strongly influences the movement of plasma. The findings therefore offer new insights into how magnetic fields and plasma interact throughout the solar atmosphere.
Instead of tracking individual sunspots or magnetic features, the team developed a novel image-correlation technique. They compared thousands of full-disk radio images of the Sun taken one day apart and measured tiny shifts in brightness patterns over nearly three decades. Using this method, they were able to map the large-scale movement of materials in the Sun’s atmosphere.
One of the most significant findings emerged when the radio observations were compared with long-term maps of the Sun’s magnetic field. The bright features seen in radio images were found to move poleward in close step with the transport of magnetic fields. This strong connection suggests that structures observed high in the Sun’s atmosphere remain linked to magnetic fields rooted much deeper inside the Sun.
“By showing that the Sun’s upper atmosphere reflects large-scale flows occurring deep below the surface, the research provides an important new tool for studying the solar dynamo—the process responsible for generating the Sun’s magnetic field and powering its activity cycle,” the Ministry said.