For 100 years people have been researching this,” Jarboe says.
For 100 years people have been researching this," Jarboe said.
The observational data are key to
confirming our picture of how the sun functions,” Jarboe says.
There's nothing there, and then all of a sudden, you see it in a flash,” Jarboe says.
There's nothing there, and then all of a sudden, you see it in a flash,” Jarboe said.
That mismatch, Jarboe says, may have happened during the decades
of little sunspot activity known as the“Maunder Minimum.
Our model is completely different from a normal picture of the
Sun,” said first author Thomas Jarboe, a UW professor of aeronautics and astronautics.
Scientists had thought that a sunspot was generated down at 30% of the depth of the sun,
and then came up in a twisted rope of plasma that pops out,” Jarboe says.
Scientists had thought that a sunspot was generated down at 30% of the depth of the sun and
then came up in a twisted rope of plasma that pops out,” Jarboe said.
Scientists had thought that a sunspot was generated down at 30 percent of the depth of the Sun,
and then came up in a twisted rope of plasma that pops out,” Jarboe said.