Space – Astrophysicist Eugene Parker, pioneer of solar winds, is dead

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Eugene Parker, who died Wednesday at the age of 94, was the first to theorize the existence of solar winds, in 1958.

Eugene Parker on May 30, 2017 in Chicago.

AFP

American astrophysicist Eugene Parker, a specialist in the Sun and the first to have theorized the existence of solar winds, has died at the age of 94, NASA announced on Wednesday.

Recognized for his great qualities in applied mathematics, he was seen as one of the major precursors of heliophysics, the study of the Sun and its system. In 2018, he became the first person to attend the launch of a research probe that bears his name.

“Gene Parker was a legendary figure in our discipline,” said Angela Olinto, dean of the faculty of physics at the University of Chicago, its parent company, who said he died on Tuesday. “His vision of the Sun and the solar system was well ahead of its time,” she added.

Discovery initially dismissed

A reference to his publication, submitted in 1958, describing for the first time, using advanced calculations, the phenomenon of solar winds – continuous flows of particles from the Sun. A discovery initially rejected.

“The first reviewer of my article said ‘Well, I think he should go to the library and dive into this subject before writing an article regarding it, because (his publication) is nonsense total”, he said in 2018.

The director of the “Astrophysical Journal”, Subrahmanyan Chandrasekhar, future Nobel Prize winner, had to confirm his calculations to validate the publication, the conclusions of which were confirmed in 1962 with direct observations of the solar wind by a NASA probe.

«Nanoflares»

Scientists now know that solar winds sweep across all planets in the solar system, shielding them from dangerous radiation and sometimes disrupting communications on Earth. He was also the originator of the idea of ​​“nanoflares”, small explosions on the Sun that would explain the heat of the solar corona, hotter than its surface itself. Decorated multiple times, he was professor emeritus at the University of Chicago.

The Parker probe, named in his honor and launched in 2018, approached the Sun like no spacecraft before, transmitting to researchers a wealth of data at the origin of many discoveries, in particular on space weather.

(AFP)

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