PUNCH News

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Current front page items
2025-06-13 PUNCH Science Nugget

PUNCH tracks space weather and the solar wind itself across the entire inner solar system. This preliminary movie marks the first time a complete halo CME has been tracked all the way across the inner solar system, to impact with Earth.


2025-06-11 PUNCH Science Nugget

Although PUNCH is still finishing up commissioning, it is beginning to produce scientifically interesting data. This image is an example: while the complete data processing pipeline is still being refined, the instrument is producing data that reveal the breathtaking beauty of the solar corona and the detailed structure that is the subject of PUNCH science. This image of the corona, during the eruption of a large CME on 6/3/2025, shows the detailed, wispy structure of the background corona and the CME itself.


2025-05-20 PUNCH Science Nugget

Downlinking data from space costs money. PUNCH generates a lot of data, which drives the cost of operations – so we do everything we can to reduce the size of each image. We can’t use “lossy” compression algorithms, since a lot of the PUNCH science lives in very faint fluctuations that would be discarded in compression. Coming out of the camera, each WFI image is 8 Megabytes (MB) of 16-bit values. Using JPEG-LS (a lossless algorithm) on the raw images would reduce them to about 3 MB each. But we can (and do) squeeze them further.


Archive
2025-05-19 PUNCH Science Nugget

PUNCH images of space are now available for download from NASA’s Solar Data Analysis Center (SDAC), in scientific-grade FITS format with relevant pointing and spacecraft-status metadata included. The data are updated twice daily by SDAC from the Science Operation Center (SOC) servers at Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in Boulder, Colorado – and will continue to update as data arrive from space and are processed by the SOC. The data are also being indexed by the Virtual Solar Observatory. The PUNCH website includes links to documentation for the data and for the mission. Many thanks to Marcus Hughes (PUNCH SOC Lead), Jack Ireland (SDAC Lead), and their teams for opening the taps.


2025-05-05 PUNCH Science Nugget

Commissioning of the PUNCH instruments is ongoing. As part of that activity, we ran the first full-orbit NFI (Narrow Field Imager) science sequence on Sunday, April 27. NFI captured several images of the Moon passing by the Sun in the sky, as seen in this unfiltered “Level 0” image in the standard PUNCH pseudocolor palette. The new Moon appears full, because it is illuminated by Earthshine from the full Earth (as seen from the lunar surface). This image is useful to demonstrate that the Moon does not directly interfere with NFI’s primary science, as it is not bright enough to impact the existing pattern of glinting stray light.


2025-04-25 PUNCH Science Nugget

There've been lots of stories about this week’s triple-conjunction smiley moon in the media. We happened to catch the conjunction during PUNCH commissioning, along with two other planets besides!


2025-04-23 PUNCH Science Nugget

This beautiful, ghostly polarimetric rainbow reveals the direction and degree of polarization of the ghostly zodiacal light, in a preliminary data product from the WFI-2 spacecraft. On 18-April, WFI-2 executed its first polarimetric triplet imaging, collecting images through all three of its polarizers in succession. The polarimetric triplet image, expressed as RGB color channels, reveals the direction (via hue) and degree (via saturation) of polarization everywhere in the field of view all at once. WFI looks to one side of the Sun (marked with a star glyph). This image, made with Level 0 (uncalibrated) data direct from the WFI-2 camera, is consistent with existing results (Leinert et al. 1998) on the direction and degree of polarization of the zodiacal light. Stars appear white because they are mostly unpolarized compared to the 7% polarization of the zodiacal light. PUNCH uses a novel mathematical formalism (“MZP”, DeForest et al. 2022) to manipulate and background-subtract the polarimetric values from each of its four cameras. Chromatic treatment of coronal polarization was demonstrated at the 2023 total solar eclipse (Patel et al. 2023), highlighting the long-term synergy between ground- and space-based observations of the corona.



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