The woman who stared at the sun - Alex Gendler

2,219,109 views ・ 2021-05-24

TED-Ed


Please double-click on the English subtitles below to play the video.

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In the spring of 1944, Tokyo residents experienced numerous aerial attacks
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from Allied bombers.
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Air raid sirens warned citizens to get indoors
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and preceded strategic blackouts across the city.
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But 28-year old Hisako Koyama saw these blackouts as opportunities.
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Dragging a futon over her head for protection,
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Koyama would gaze at the night sky,
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tracking all sorts of astronomical phenomena.
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However, her latest endeavor required the light of day.
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By angling her telescope towards the sun,
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Koyama could project the star's light onto a sheet of paper,
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allowing her to sketch the sun’s shifting surface.
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She spent weeks recreating this set up, tracking every change she saw.
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But while Koyama didn't know it,
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these drawings were the start of one of the most important records
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of solar activity in human history.
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To understand exactly what Koyama saw on the sun’s surface,
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we first need to understand what’s happening inside the star.
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Every second, trillions of hydrogen atoms
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fuse into helium atoms in a process called nuclear fusion.
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This ongoing explosion maintains the sun’s internal temperature
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of roughly 15 million degrees Celsius,
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which is more than enough energy to transform gas
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into churning pools of plasma.
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Plasma consists of charged particles that produce powerful magnetic fields.
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But unlike the stable charged particles that maintain magnetic activity on Earth,
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this plasma is constantly in flux,
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alternately disrupting and amplifying the sun's magnetic field.
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This ongoing movement can produce
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temporary concentrations of magnetic activity
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which inhibit the movement of molecules and in turn reduce heat in that area.
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And since regions with less heat generate less light,
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places with the strongest magnetic fields appear as dark spots
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scattered across the sun’s surface.
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These so-called sunspots are always moving,
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both as a result of plasma swirling within the sphere,
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and the sun’s rotation.
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And because they’re often clustered together,
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accurately counting sunspots and tracking their movement can be a challenge,
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depending greatly on the perception and judgment of the viewer.
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This is precisely where Koyama’s contributions would be so valuable.
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Despite having no formal training in astronomy,
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her observations and sketches were remarkably accurate.
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After sending her work to the Oriental Astronomical Association,
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she received a letter of commendation for her dedicated and detailed observations.
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With their support, she began to visit the Tokyo Museum of Science,
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where she could use a far superior telescope to continue her work.
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Koyama soon joined the museum's staff as a professional observer,
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and over the next 40 years, she worked on a daily basis,
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producing over 10,000 drawings of the sun’s surface.
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Researchers already knew magnetic currents in the sun followed an 11 year cycle
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that moved sunspots in a butterfly shaped path over the star’s surface.
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But using Koyama’s record,
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they could precisely follow specific sunspots and clusters
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through that journey.
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This kind of detail offered a real-time indication of the sun’s magnetic activity,
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allowing scientists to track all kinds of solar phenomena,
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including volatile solar flares.
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These flares typically emanate from the vicinity of sunspots,
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and can travel all the way to Earth’s atmosphere.
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Here, they can create geomagnetic storms
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capable of disrupting long range communication and causing blackouts.
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Solar flares also pose a major risk to satellites and manned space stations,
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making them essential to predict and plan for.
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During an interview in 1964,
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Koyama lamented that her 17 years of observation had barely been enough
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to produce a single butterfly record of the solar cycle.
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But by the end of her career, she’d drawn three and a half cycles—
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one of the longest records ever made.
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Better still, the quality of her drawings was so consistent,
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researchers used them as a baseline to reconstruct the past 400 years
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of sunspot activity from various historical sources.
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This project extends Koyama’s legacy far beyond her own lifetime,
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and proves that science is not built solely on astounding discoveries,
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but also on careful observation of the world around us.
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