Three scientists at RoCS are out with new scientific papers concerning the Sun.
2023
Two young scientists at RoCS' had their first and their last paper published this summer.
Thanks to close-up images of the Sun obtained during Solar Orbiter’s perihelion passage of October 2022, solar physicists have seen how fleeting magnetic fields at the solar surface build up into the solar atmosphere
Rosseland Centre of Solar Physics (RoCS) got 167 million CPU hours to study the Sun.
RoCS's scientists have published six papers during the summer months.
ESA’s Solar Orbiter may have taken another step towards solving the eighty-year-old mystery of why the Sun’s outer atmosphere is so hot.
Four publications from RoCS have recently been accepted for publication. Rebecca Robinson, Luc Rouppe van der Voort, Carlos José Díaz Baso and Sneha Pandit presents their latest findings.
Currently modulated by an 11-year cycle, will this cyclical state of solar magnetism persist along its evolution?
As a "Young Research Talent”; Maryam Saberi can start tracing the impact of evolved stars on the Galactic chemical enrichment.
Two publications have been accepted for publication from RoCS in December 2022 and January 2023. Doctoral Research Becca Robinson and Affiliated Researcher Souvik Bose present their latest findings.
The WaLSA Team have published a 170 page review article in the high-impact factor journal ‘Living Reviews in Solar Physics’. RoCS' Shahin Jafarzadeh is part of the international team.