Basics of the Solar Wind
Nicole Meyer-Vernet
Published by: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 2007
ISBN: 0521814200
List price: £70.00
463 pp
www.cambridge.org
The solar wind, charged particles flowing from the Sun, reaches everything in the solar system: dust, comets, planets. Although Earth’s magnetosphere acts as a shield from this potentially dangerous radiation, it is not a physical barrier. Our magnetic field deflects much of the flow, like water flowing around a rock in midstream, but the process of deflection itself changes our magnetosphere. And not all the solar wind is deflected: when we see aurora we are watching the effects of solar wind particles inside our magnetosphere.
The solar wind brings the Sun to our doorstep, and, with the new generation of geomagnetic instruments able to measure its effects while monitoring our magnetic field, space weather is coming to the attention of geoscientists. This book, published during the 2007 ‘International Heliophysical Year’ and at a time of renewed interest in the volume of space dominated by the Sun, is an introduction to the causes, properties, effects and consequences of the wind. It aims to provide “physical intuition rather than mathematical rigour” - That said, plasma physics is complex and even the simplified treatment presented here, focused on physical principles, is not trivial. However, it is an excellent place to start, and the physics and maths tools needed to unpick Maxwell’s equations and magnetohydrodynamics, for example, are presented clearly and concisely. The author has an easy style and a knack for clarity, picking out questions to answer and summarising key points without dull repetition.
There are plenty of illustrations, including some excellent sketches and cartoons, and overviews of the types of images used to study the Sun and the spacecraft that collect much of the data. Later parts of the book consider the effects of the solar wind on dust and larger solar system bodies, including the planets, but also examine the effects on comets, whose tails played a big part in the discovery of the solar wind in the first place.
Overall, this is a good place to start to understand the workings of the heliosphere and how everything from dust to spacecraft is affected by the all-pervasive plasma. Nicole Meyer-Vernet has done an excellent job of starting at the very beginning of a complex topic and talking the reader through to an understanding of current research questions, with good humour and a sharp eye for inconsistencies.
Sue Bowler