Overview

Heliophysics is the science of how the Sun interacts with everything around it: planets, moons, comets, dust, magnetic fields, and even the invisible edges of our solar system.
It connects astronomy, plasma physics, planetary science, and space weather into one big story: how the Sun shapes our cosmic neighbourhood.

This page introduces the core ideas behind heliophysics and sets the stage for the entire Helio House.


What is Heliophysics?

Heliophysics is the study of the Sun as a star and its influence throughout the solar system.
It brings together:

It answers questions like:
🌟 How does the Sun create space weather?
🌟 How does that weather reach Earth and the planets?
🌟 How does the heliosphere protect us from interstellar space?

Heliophysics is everything between the Sun’s core and the very edge of the solar system.


The Heliosphere

A giant, invisible bubble powered by the Sun

The heliosphere is the enormous bubble of space carved out by the Sun’s constant outflow of plasma (the solar wind). It expands far beyond the planets, stretching more than 100 times farther than the distance from the Earth to the Sun. Everything inside this bubble, from Mercury to the edge where Voyager 1 drifts, is living inside the Sun’s influence.

Illustration of the Heliosphere from NASA.

The Sun is always blowing a stream of electrically charged particles in all directions. This solar wind is:

Because the Sun rotates, this outward flow forms the famous Parker spiral, twisting the heliosphere into a giant, spiralling magnetic structure.

* Scientists talk about “fast” and “slow” solar wind, but both are still incredibly fast by everyday standards. The “slow” wind is still travelling at hundreds of kilometres per second. Likewise, when we say the solar wind is “hot,” we mean its temperature is extremely high, not that it carries a lot of heat. It’s like putting your hand in a hot oven versus boiling water: the oven has a higher temperature, but the water transfers heat far more efficiently. The solar wind is similar, a very high temperature, but so thin that it barely transfers heat at all.

Illustration of the Parker Spiral field. Via NMDB.

Running through the middle of the heliosphere is the HCS, sometimes called the “ballerina skirt.”
It is the boundary between opposite magnetic polarities in the solar wind – and it is massive, wrinkling and waving through the whole solar system.

As the Sun’s magnetic field flips every ~11 years, the HCS stretches, tilts, and becomes more wobbly. Spacecraft crossing it feel rapid magnetic changes, and energetic particles can drift along its surface like a cosmic highway.

The heliosphere isn’t infinite, eventually it weakens enough that interstellar space pushes back. It ends in three major regions:

🌟 Termination Shock:
Where the fast solar wind suddenly slows down as it plows into the interstellar medium. Voyager 1 and 2 detected this shock years apart, giving us our first real “edge map.”

🌟 Heliosheath:
A turbulent region beyond the shock where slowed-down solar wind piles up. It’s a bit like the water building up in front of a boat.

🌟 Heliopause:
The true outer boundary, where the solar wind loses its battle with interstellar space. This is where the Sun’s influence ends, and the galaxy’s begins.

Voyager 1 crossed it in 2012, and Voyager 2 followed in 2018. Both spacecraft are now officially in interstellar space, still sending signals home.

The heliosphere acts as a cosmic shield, blocking a huge amount of high energy galactic cosmic rays from reaching the inner planets. Without it:

In other words: the heliosphere is one of the biggest reasons our solar system is safe and habitable.

The heliosphere is not static, it expands when the Sun is active and shrinks when the Sun is quiet.

CMEs and fast solar wind streams create temporary dents, waves, and distortions. It is a dynamic system responding to every change on the Sun, from sunspot cycles to solar storms.


Plasma Physics in space

The science of charged particles, magnetic fields, and the invisible forces that shape our solar system

When you think of matter, you probably picture solids, liquids, and gases.
But in space, the most common state of matter by far is plasma: a hot, electrically charged soup of particles that behaves in ways no normal gas does. The Sun, the solar wind, auroras, lightning, and even neon signs… all plasma. Understanding plasma is key to understanding how the Sun affects everything around it.


Plasma forms when a gas becomes so hot that its atoms break apart into:

This makes plasma electrically active. Because it’s full of moving charges, it can carry currents, generate magnetic fields, and respond to electromagnetic forces. Unlike a gas, plasma is shaped by magnetism as much as pressure or motion.


In plasma, magnetic fields behave almost like they are “frozen” into the material. When plasma moves, the magnetic field gets dragged along with it. This leads to some of the most important space phenomena:

🌟 Magnetic loops on the Sun
🌟 The Parker spiral in the solar wind
🌟 The heliospheric current sheet
🌟 Magnetospheres around planets
🌟 Auroras
🌟 Space storms and radiation belts

Plasma + magnetic fields = the entire field of magnetohydrodynamics (MHD). But don’t worry, we’re not doing equations here.


Even though space is (mostly) empty, plasma can create waves just like the ocean:

These waves play a role in the aurora, in radiation belts, and even in how solar storms travel.


When fast solar wind slams into slower wind, or when a CME blasts outward at high speed, shocks form (similar to sonic booms from an airplane). These shocks can:

Between shocks, the solar wind is full of turbulence, constantly swirling and mixing, like currents in a river.


Plasma physics explains almost everything dynamic in the solar system:

🌟 Solar flares: magnetic energy suddenly releasing
🌟 Coronal mass ejections: plasma clouds launched into space
🌟 Auroras: energetic particles spiralling along magnetic field lines towards our atmosphere
🌟 Planetary magnetospheres: plasma deflecting solar wind
🌟 Radiation belts: trapped energetic particles
🌟 Comet tails: solar wind interacting with comet plasma
🌟 Shocks around planets and CMEs
🌟 The heliosphere itself

Once you know plasma physics, you see the universe differently, everything becomes interconnected.


Solar–Planetary interactions

Even though all planets share the same star, the way they respond to the Sun’s energy, particles, and magnetic fields varies dramatically. Some worlds glow with auroras, some get blasted by the solar wind, some lose their atmospheres, and others channel energy into gigantic storms.


Earth has a strong magnetic field and a thick atmosphere, giving it one of the most complex Sun–planet relationships.

Earth is shielded, but not immune.


Mars used to have a strong magnetic field, but it faded billions of years ago. Without that protection:

Mars is a great example of how the Sun can reshape a planet over time.


Being so close to the Sun, Mercury experiences:

It does have a weak magnetic field, but it’s tiny, so space weather often hits the surface directly, knocking particles off and creating a thin, temporary “exosphere.”


Jupiter has the largest magnetic field of any planet. This creates:

Jupiter interacts with the Sun, but it also generates a lot of its own space weather internally.


Saturn’s magnetic field is weaker than Jupiter’s but still strong enough to:

During solar storms, its rings brighten as energetic particles slam into the ice.


Moons and Other Bodies

No atmosphere. No magnetic field. When solar wind hits it, particles embed in the soil. Dust can even become electrically charged and lift off the surface.

Jupiter’s moons sit inside its mass of plasma. Ganymede even has its own magnetic field, the only moon that does!

When they approach the Sun, they develop two tails:

Thick atmosphere but no global magnetic field → the Sun sculpts its upper atmosphere directly, creating comet-like “tails” streaming out behind it.


Understanding how the Sun affects different worlds helps us:

It also helps us predict how the Sun might affect Earth in the future, especially during solar maximums, flares, and extreme events.


The Big Picture: A Connected System

Heliophysics is not just about the Sun, or the planets, or space weather, it’s about how every part of the solar system reacts to every other part. Imagine the entire solar system as a giant living machine, with the Sun at its heart. When the Sun changes, everything else responds.

Solar flares → solar wind → magnetospheres → atmospheres → surfaces → technology → humans.


Deep inside the Sun, nuclear fusion creates:


The Sun’s magnetic field is constantly twisting, tangling, and re-shaping itself.
This leads to:

When the magnetic field snaps and reconnects, huge amounts of energy are released, launching storms that travel through the solar system.


Energetic particles and solar wind flow across the heliosphere, following the curved paths of the Parker spiral.
Along the way, they:


Every planet (and many moons) respond depending on:

Earth protects us. Mars gets stripped. Jupiter glows fiercely. Mercury gets blasted head on. This diversity helps scientists understand not just our solar system, but how stars shape planets everywhere.


All solar wind and magnetic activity inflate the heliosphere, our enormous solar bubble. It shields us from interstellar radiation and marks the boundary between “our Sun’s space” and the wider galaxy. Changes on the Sun ripple outward to the heliopause itself.


The Sun’s influence reaches all the way to Earth’s surface, often through the technology we rely on:


Heliophysics helps us answer big questions:

🌟 What controls space weather?
🌟 How do stars shape their planets?
🌟 What makes a planet habitable?
🌟 How do we protect astronauts and spacecraft?
🌟 What can our Sun teach us about stars everywhere?

It connects the microscopic (particles) and the cosmic (the heliosphere). It links physics, astronomy, geology, engineering, and even climate science. Most importantly, heliophysics gives us the tools to understand, and live safely within, our dynamic solar system.