12/22/2025
There’s a point around the Sun where material escapes forever. NASA’s Parker Solar Probe just helped map it for the first time.
This boundary, called the Alfvén surface, is the point where solar material finally escapes the Sun’s magnetic grip and becomes the solar wind. Once particles cross it, there’s no coming back. That wind races through the solar system at more than a million miles per hour, shaping space weather that can affect satellites, astronauts, power grids, and even auroras on Earth.
What makes this breakthrough possible is that Parker doesn’t just observe the Sun from afar, it repeatedly flies through this boundary, validating maps created with other spacecraft and showing how the Sun’s activity reshapes this region over its 11-year cycle.
Understanding where this boundary is, and how it changes, helps scientists answer big questions about the Sun’s atmosphere and better predict how solar activity ripples outward through the solar system, all the way to Earth.