Breaking 19:20 Asian stocks hit records as Nikkei tops 58000 18:30 Iranian TV director fired after on-air anti-Khamenei slip 18:00 Florida Senate passes historic resolution praising Morocco–US partnership 17:30 Mexico sends over 800 tons of humanitarian aid to Cuba amid economic crisis 16:50 World Monuments Fund commits $7 million to global heritage sites 16:45 Sabri Al-Hou to "Walaw": Madrid meeting gives strong momentum to resolve Moroccan Sahara dispute 16:20 EU identifies two training sites in Ukraine for troop instruction 15:50 Nissan forecasts $4.2 billion annual loss amid restructuring 15:41 Epstein document release triggers resignations across Europe 14:50 Russian war losses outpace recruitment for first time in January 14:20 Russia pledges oil aid to Cuba amid tourist evacuation 13:20 Microbes extract platinum metals from meteorites in space station test 13:00 After the Greenland saga, NATO moves to prevent another crisis 12:50 Goldman Sachs warns of new era of high commodity volatility 12:20 Modified herpes virus boosts immune attack against deadly brain cancer 12:15 Pressure mounts on Dubai’s DP World amid Epstein document revelations 12:00 United Kingdom pledges over £500 million in aid to strengthen Ukraine’s defense 11:50 German researchers develop AI to predict liquid properties 11:20 US energy secretary pledges dramatic rise in Venezuela oil output 11:00 Aliyev hails US-Azerbaijan strategic partnership charter as ‘historic’ milestone 10:50 Ukraine tests low cost Sunray laser to shoot down drones 09:20 Musk restructures xAI into four divisions amid cofounder departures 08:50 Ukraine warns of nuclear disaster risk at Zaporizhzhia plant 08:00 Italy declines to join Trump’s board of peace citing constitutional constraints 07:50 Wrexham sells minority stake to Apollo Sports Capital 07:40 Canada school shooting: Investigators examine profile of 18-year-old suspect 07:20 Venezuela moves toward adopting historic amnesty law amid political tensions

Scientists pinpoint gamma ray source in powerful solar flares

Thursday 08 January 2026 - 10:50
By: Dakir Madiha
Scientists pinpoint gamma ray source in powerful solar flares

Researchers at the New Jersey Institute of Technology have uncovered a previously unknown source of intense gamma radiation generated during the sun's most powerful flares, solving a decades-old puzzle. Published January 7 in Nature Astronomy, these findings could enhance space weather forecasting and clarify how solar flares unleash their extreme energy.

The breakthrough identifies a newly detected class of high-energy particles in the sun's corona its upper atmosphere as the origin of gamma ray signals observed in major flares. These particles, reaching energies of several million electronvolts, prove hundreds to thousands of times more energetic than typical flare particles and travel near light speed.

"We knew solar flares produced a unique gamma ray signal, but those data alone couldn't reveal their source or generation mechanism," said lead author Gregory Fleishman, research professor of physics at NJIT's Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research. "By combining gamma ray and microwave observations from a solar flare, we've finally cracked this mystery."

The NJIT team analyzed a massive X8.2 flare from September 10, 2017, merging data from NASA's Fermi space telescope and NJIT's Expanded Owens Valley Solar Array radio telescope network in California. Their analysis pinpointed a distinct solar atmosphere region dubbed Region of Interest 3 where microwave and gamma signals overlapped, indicating a unique population of particles energized to millions of electronvolts.

Advanced modeling linked these particles' energy distribution directly to the observed gamma spectrum. Gamma rays arise from bremsstrahlung radiation, where charged particles emit high-energy light upon colliding with solar atmospheric matter.

Unlike typical flare-accelerated electrons, whose numbers drop as energy rises, this newfound population stands out with most particles at very high energies, Fleishman noted.

Key questions linger, such as whether these are electrons or positrons. Future insights may come from EOVSA-15, an upgrade to the Owens Valley array adding 15 new antennas and advanced ultra-wideband feeds. Led by NJIT physics professor Bin Chen, a co-author, the project receives National Science Foundation funding.

"Measuring polarization in microwave emissions from similar events could definitively distinguish them," Fleishman said. "We expect to gain that capability soon with the EOVSA-15 upgrade."


  • Fajr
  • Sunrise
  • Dhuhr
  • Asr
  • Maghrib
  • Isha

Read more

This website, walaw.press, uses cookies to provide you with a good browsing experience and to continuously improve our services. By continuing to browse this site, you agree to the use of these cookies.