The event occurred during the Parker Solar Probe mission’s thirteenth encounter. The observations marked a major departure from the typical study of CMEs, which often occur from Earth. The Parker Space Probe was only 5.7 million miles from the Sun’s surface, significantly closer than the Earth’s typical distance of about 93 million miles from the Sun.
“These interactions between CMEs and dust were theorized two decades ago, but had not been observed until Parker Solar Probe viewed a CME act like a vacuum cleaner, clearing the dust out of its path,” says Guillermo Stenborg, an astrophysicist at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Maryland. Stenborg is the lead author on the new research paper.
“Parker Solar Probe’s Wide Field Imagery for Solar Probe camera observes as the spacecraft passes through a massive coronal mass ejection on September 5, 2022. Coronal mass ejections are immense eruptions of plasma and energy from the Sun’s corona that drive space weather,” NASA explains. | Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Naval Research Lab
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