Telescopes aboard the Hinode satellite, launched by the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency in September 2006, have been returning some of their first results, featured in the current issue of Science. Left, a photo in visible light shows threadlike features in a prominence on the Sun's surface. Right, an image of Mercury in transit across the disk of the Sun.
Using Hinode's high resolution X-ray telescope, a team led by Jonathan Cirtain at Nasa's Marshall Space Flight Centre, Huntsville, Alabama, peered into the atmosphere at the Sun's poles and observed record numbers of jets of X-rays, sent out as fountains of rapidly-moving hot plasma. Cirtain's team observed an average of 240 jets per day, some up to 12,000 miles wide and 600,000 miles long, and conclude that Alfven waves are being formed at the same time. "The large number of jets, coupled with the high speeds of the outflowing plasma, lends further credence to the idea that X-ray jets are a driving force in the creation of the fast solar wind."