Scientists Say: Campfire

These mini solar flares could help solve a big mystery about the sun

A false-color image of the sun in ultraviolet light showing flares and eruptions breaking from its surface

This image taken by the European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter shows what the sun looks like in ultraviolet light. UV images like this helped scientists first identify “campfire” flares on the sun in 2020.

EUI Team/Solar Orbiter/ESA and NASA, CSL, IAS, MPS, WRC/PMOD, ROB, MSSL/UCL

Campfire (noun, “KAMP FYRE”)

Campfires are small eruptions on the sun’s surface. They are similar to massive explosions known as solar flares and coronal mass ejections, or CMEs. But campfires are only about a millionth or a billionth the size of those outbursts.

The European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter snapped the first pictures of campfires in 2020. To the probe’s ultraviolet camera, these events appeared as flickers of UV light. Like solar flares and CMEs, campfires are thought to arise when magnetic fields on the sun interact. But scientists are still teasing out just how the sun’s campfires ignite.

Campfires may be puny by solar standards. But they’re still pretty epic events. The smallest ones are a few hundred kilometers (miles) across. That’s about as big as Arkansas. And campfires can stretch thousands of kilometers above the sun’s surface. Each one lasts no longer than a few minutes. But campfires light up much more frequently than larger solar flares — which could help solve a longstanding mystery about the sun. Namely, why the sun’s outer atmosphere, or corona, is so hot.

The solar corona is millions of degrees Celsius. That’s much hotter than the sun’s surface, which sizzles at about 5,500° Celsius (9,930° Fahrenheit). Perhaps campfires, which boast temperatures around 1 million degrees Celsius, add heat to the corona. 

In a sentence

The Solar Orbiter probe first spotted solar campfires when it was about half the distance from Earth to the sun.

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Maria Temming is the Assistant Managing Editor at Science News Explores. She has bachelor's degrees in physics and English, and a master's in science writing.