New telescope may have finally solved the Sun’s greatest heat mystery
Scientists using Hawaii’s DKIST telescope have detected magnetic Alfven waves in the Sun’s corona, solving a decades-old mystery of why the Sun’s outer layer burns so much hotter than its surface.
- Oct 31, 2025,
- Updated Oct 31, 2025 11:37 AM IST

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For over 80 years, scientists have been puzzled by one burning paradox — why the Sun’s outer layer blazes millions of degrees hotter than its surface. Now, a new telescope may have cracked the code.

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The Sun’s surface burns at 10,000°F, but its corona sizzles at 2 million°F — defying basic thermodynamics. The recent study may finally reveal the missing “energy bridge” between the two layers.

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The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Hawaii detected rhythmic ripples — Alfven waves — pulsing through the Sun’s magnetic field, potentially carrying the heat energy scientists have long sought. (Credit: NSO/AURA/NSF)

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Through Doppler-shift imagery, researchers observed vivid red and blue streaks — plasma dancing in magnetic spirals — a direct signature of Alfven waves swirling through the solar atmosphere.

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Physicist Richard Morton’s team suggests these magnetic waves act as invisible couriers, channeling energy from the Sun’s surface upward, where it explodes into heat that fuels the corona’s fury.

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Previous instruments missed these faint oscillations, but DKIST’s ultra-sensitive Cryo-NIRSP instrument captured them in stunning detail — a first for solar science and a leap for space weather forecasting.

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Magnetic reconnection was once blamed for heating the corona, but the study shows Alfven waves may contribute half the energy. The Sun’s heat mystery might be a duet, not a solo.

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These findings extend beyond our solar system — helping astronomers understand how other stars transfer energy, shape planetary atmospheres, and influence cosmic radiation across galaxies.

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Next-gen solar studies aim to map these waves in real time — offering not just insight into the Sun’s heart, but early warnings for solar storms that could disrupt power grids and satellites on Earth.
