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In a new study using the NSF’s Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope (DKIST), scientists captured the sharpest-ever views of the Sun’s surface, revealing ultra-narrow bright and dark “striations” only ~20 kilometers wide. These striations – alternating light and dark bands on the walls of solar granules – arise from tiny fluctuations in the magnetic field, tracing the Sun’s magnetism. DKIST’s unmatched 4-meter mirror achieved ~0.03″ (~20 km) resolution – roughly the length of Manhattan Island – unveiling a new layer of complexity in solar magnetic structure. Lead author Dr. David Kuridze calls them “the fingerprints of fine-scale magnetic field variations”.

Ultra-Fine Striations on the Solar Photosphere

According to the study, using DKIST’s Visible Broadband Imager (VBI) in the G-band (430 nm), researchers captured fine stripes at ~0.03″ (~20 km) resolution. The images show alternating bright and dark bands on solar granule walls, each 20–50 km across. These patterns come from thin, curtain-like sheets of magnetic field rippling across the granule walls.

As Kuridze explains, stronger fields yield bright lanes and weaker fields dark lanes. Models show that ~100 gauss of field variation can create slight density dips (Wilson depressions) a few kilometers deep in the photosphere. At this fine scale, Kuridze notes, the striations are literally “the fingerprints of fine-scale magnetic field variations”.

Implications for Solar Magnetism and Space Weather

Mapping this fine-scale magnetic architecture is crucial for understanding solar storms. Tiny surface fields can seed flares, eruptions and coronal mass ejections – events that drive space weather – so resolving them improves space weather forecasting. NSO co-author Dr. Han Uitenbroek points out that similar magnetically induced stripes have been seen in distant molecular clouds, highlighting the universal significance of this phenomenon.

With its 4-meter aperture – the world’s largest solar telescope – DKIST was built to probe solar magnetism. Observers hail this discovery as “one of many firsts” for Inouye, underscoring DKIST’s unique power to reveal the small-scale magnetic physics that drive space weather. DKIST was designed to resolve these fine magnetic features.

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Mysterious Asteroid Impact Found in Australia, But the Crater is Missing

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Scientists have identified 11-million-year-old glass fragments in South Australia that record a massive asteroid impact never before known. Despite the event’s magnitude, the crater remains undiscovered, raising new questions about how often large asteroids have struck Earth and their role in shaping its surface.

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Ryugu Samples Reveal Ancient Water Flow on Asteroid for a Billion Years

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Microscopic samples from asteroid Ryugu reveal that liquid water once flowed through its parent body long after its formation. The finding, led by University of Tokyo scientists, suggests that such asteroids may have delivered far more water to early Earth than previously thought, offering a new perspective on how our planet’s oceans originated.

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Scientists Create Most Detailed Radio Map of Early Universe Using MWA

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Scientists using the Murchison Widefield Array in Australia analyzed nine years of radio data to study the elusive 21-cm hydrogen signal from the universe’s dark ages. Their findings suggest early black holes and stars had already heated cosmic gas, marking the first observational evidence of this warming phase.

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