See amazing new sun images from NJIT’s Big Bear Solar Observatory

Caption: The most detailed sunspot ever obtained in visible light was seen by new telescope at NJIT’s Big Bear Solar Observatory.
Credit: Big Bear Solar Observatory
NJIT Distinguished Professor Philip R. Goode and the Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO) team have achieved “first light” using a deformable mirror in what is called adaptive optics at Big Bear Solar Observatory (BBSO). Using this equipment, an image of a sunspot was published yesterday on the website of Ciel et l’Espace, as the photo of the day: http://www.cieletespace.fr/node/5752
“This photo of a sunspot is now the most detailed ever obtained in visible light,” according to Ciel et l’Espace. In September, the publication, a popular astronomy magazine, will publish several more photos of the Sun taken with BBSO’s new adaptive optics system.
Goode said that the images were achieved with the 1.6 m clear aperture, off-axis New Solar Telescope (NST) at BBSO. The telescope has a resolution covering about 50 miles on the Sun’s surface.
The telescope is the crown jewel of BBSO, the first facility-class solar observatory built in more than a generation in the U.S. The instrument is undergoing commissioning at BBSO.
Since 1997, under Goode’s direction, NJIT has owned and operated BBSO, located in a clear mountain lake. The mountain lake is characterized by sustained atmospheric stability, which is essential for BBSO’s primary interests of measuring and understanding solar complex phenomena utilizing dedicated telescopes and instruments.
The images were taken by the NST with atmospheric distortion corrected by its 97 actuator deformable mirror. By the summer of 2011, in collaboration with the National Solar Observatory, BBSO will have upgraded the current adaptive optics system to one utilizing a 349 actuator deformable mirror.
With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), Air Force Office of Scientific Research, NASA and NJIT, the NST began operation in the summer of 2009. Additional support from NSF was received a few months ago to fund further upgrades to this new optical system.
The NST will be the pathfinder for an even larger ground-based telescope, the Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST), to be built over the next decade. NJIT is an ATST co-principal investigator on this NSF project. The new grant will allow Goode and partners from the National Solar Observatory (NSO) to develop a new and more sophisticated kind of adaptive optics, known as multi-conjugate adaptive optics (MCAO).
The new optical system will allow the researchers to increase the distortion-free field of view to allow for better ways to study these larger and puzzling areas of the Sun. MCAO on the NST will be a pathfinder for the optical system of NSO’s 4-meter aperture ATST coming later in the decade.
Scientists believe magnetic structures, like sunspots hold an important key to understanding space weather. Space weather, which originates in the Sun, can have dire consequences on Earth’s climate and environment. A bad storm can disrupt power grids and communication, destroy satellites and even expose airline pilots, crew and passengers to radiation.
The new telescope now feeds a high-order adaptive optics system, which in turn feeds the next generation of technologies for measuring magnetic fields and dynamic events using visible and infrared light. A parallel computer system for real-time image enhancement highlights it.
Goode and BBSO scientists have studied solar magnetic fields for many years. They are expert at combining BBSO ground-based data with satellite data to determine dynamic properties of the solar magnetic fields.
Note that this is with much better resolution than SDO can provide [only 0.5″]. Here is the SDO image: http://jsoc.stanford.edu/data/hmi/images/2010/07/02/20100702_160000_Ic_flat_4k.jpg
that, I have to say, is pretty darn cool
How does this ground based ‘scope compare with that new satellite one? Which one’s better?
wOw! Awesome image.
Sauron is watching us!
Now THAT is very cool. Wait – no it’s not… 🙂
The Eye of Sauron!
The Swedish 1-m Solar Telescope also has adaptive optics and a resolution of 70 km on the solar surface…
How much better is this Observatory than the one at Sacramento Peak?
See: http://www.cieletespace.fr/files/image_du_jour/011-03410-01high.jpg
The detail in the centre of the spot is just stunning.
Oh my gosh. I thought it was the eye of Sauron.
Remarkable photo, thanks for posting, Anthony! I’m really struck at the granularity of the photosphere and depth of contrast in the region surrounding the sunspot.
Meanwhile, the sun continues to tease us….is it still in a minimum, or not?
Spaceweather says: “Sunspot 1101 is big but quiet. Overall, solar activity is very low.”
http://www.spaceweather.com/
Wow.
Wow! I can see in the sun but where is the iron core? (sarc off)
Kind of embarrassing for the UC’s that a New Jersey school is the one doing this work in their backyard. That said, that’s a very nice image that seems to show internal structure inside the dark spot. It’s very interesting to look at.
What possible explanation is there for the vermiform radial structures in a plasma? Shouldn’t all the matter at those temperatures be unorganized. It looks like very palpable units of mass.
“It’s not working, Mr Stibbons! Here’s that damn enormous fiery eye again!”
– Archancellor Ridcully (Terry Pratchett’s Going Postal)
Wow.
And why is it we’re building space-based solar observatories if we can get quality images like this on Earth?
Besides all the other-than-visible-light electromagnetic spectrum imagery and the marginal “early warning” benefit from placing such observatories closer to the Sun than Earth orbit, that is…
The image is so clear it almost hurts the eye.
But what it shows is also mind-boggling. For an engineer, form follows function. I see things and have pale guesses at what they DO, why they are the way they are. 50-mile resolution? So, even what we see has structures/functions at several layers down from what we see here. I live 25 miles from the Chicago Loop. The pixels are twice that. That little orange dot in the lower right black, it is more than a pixel.
Each pebble is as big as a US state or a European country.
Wow, what is going on?
Progress, yes. So much to be able to learn. Better eyes to see with are essential. Let progress keep going forward.
And last: A technical question – What sunspot is this?
It appears that the photo resembles a sunflower. Probably it is coincidental.
Amazing is an understatement. Do I understand correctly that it shows roughly a 50mile x 50mile area? I’m wondering about the exposure length – I believe what look like tightly packed stones around a scary black hole are in fact roiling convection cells. If this is so, the exposure would have had to have been pretty short to get such a crisp image.
Could you (Anthony) find out?
Hot D**n! Science can be soooo exciting when it’s being science. We have some really intelligent and creative scientists who are actually doing science.
Very impressive image. Thanks for the info.
Someone is going to say it, so I might as well. That looks exactly like an [snip].
[Let someone else say it. ~dbs, mod.]
I can almost understand why the daft cold-sun-bright-surface idea can be believed when you can actually see the ‘dark’ interior!
Well, maybe not…