What do you think, Ethan? Does this affect the environment of the Sun at all?
Many physicists think that the Sun is the heaviest most solid entity in the Solar System, and how that is the end of the story.
But the Sun is not involved in four motions like planet Earth is. It is just involved in two motions.
So, what effect would introducing a third motion (of small size but enormous speed) have on that situation of the Sun?
The Sun is particularly made up of hydrogen and helium, and that is only possible in an environment in which that can get collected.
No, gravity came particularly after we have some mass. So how did the mass get established first? Exactly. The first particles of hydrogen and helium got collected in the dead center of the proto-Solar System circulation. It's easy to show.
Get yourself a cylinder. Fill it with water and add one thousand little silver slivers to the water. Start turning the cylinder, so the water starts to swirl. The silver slivers are moving about everywhere.
Then, slowly let the turning motion subside, and watch what happens.
All the silver slivers end up collecting in one little heap in the center of the bottom of the cylinder.
With the slowing of the swirling water, the dead zone in the center widened up. Wandering silver slivers all got caught up there, one by one, in the dead zone of no motion, right in that center. Long before the swirling motion is gone, all silver slivers had already collected themselves at the bottom.
So, the Sun is the sitting duck in the Solar System. It's the dead zone of the Solar System. There is no extra motion to this zone, other than what the Milky Way is also involved in. It is not like planet Earth that spins itself and revolves around the Sun. The Sun does not do that.
Adding a tiny device like the Parker probe appears minor, but it is a great disturbance, like having an angry wasp hover across the face of Sleeping Beauty, getting angrier and angrier every time.
Lots of Northern lights visible rather far to the south since the Parker probe has started probing the Sun, wouldn't you agree?