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Alonzo
06-11-2008, 04:13 PM
June 10, 2008: For more than 400 years, astronomers have studied the sun from afar. Now NASA has decided to go there.

"We are going to visit a living, breathing star for the first time," says program scientist Lika Guhathakurta of NASA Headquarters. "This is an unexplored region of the solar system and the possibilities for discovery are off the charts."

Right: An artist's concept of Solar Probe Plus. [more]

The name of the mission is Solar Probe+ (pronounced "Solar Probe plus"). It's a heat-resistant spacecraft designed to plunge deep into the sun's atmosphere where it can sample solar wind and magnetism first hand. Launch could happen as early as 2015. By the time the mission ends 7 years later, planners believe Solar Probe+ will solve two great mysteries of astrophysics and make many new discoveries along the way.

The probe is still in its early design phase, called "pre-phase A" at NASA headquarters, says Guhathakurta. "We have a lot of work to do, but it's very exciting."

Johns Hopkins' Applied Physics Lab (APL) will design and build the spacecraft for NASA. APL already has experience sending probes toward the sun. APL's MESSENGER spacecraft completed its first flyby of the planet Mercury in January 2008 and many of the same heat-resistant technologies will fortify Solar Probe+. (Note: The mission is called Solar Probe plus because it builds on an earlier 2005 APL design called Solar Probe.)

At closest approach, Solar Probe+ will be 7 million km or 9 solar radii from the sun. There, the spacecraft's carbon-composite heat shield must withstand temperatures greater than 1400o C and survive blasts of radiation at levels not experienced by any previous spacecraft. Naturally, the probe is solar powered; it will get its electricity from liquid-cooled solar panels that can retract behind the heat-shield when sunlight becomes too intense. From these near distances, the Sun will appear 23 times wider than it does in the skies of Earth.

Above: A simulated view of the Sun illustrating the trajectory of Solar Probe+ during its multiple near-Sun passes. [Larger image]

The two mysteries prompting this mission are the high temperature of the sun's corona and the puzzling acceleration of the solar wind:

Mystery #1—the corona: If you stuck a thermometer in the surface of the sun, it would read about 6000o C. Intuition says the temperature should drop as you back away; instead, it rises. The sun's outer atmosphere, the corona, registers more than a million degrees Celsius, hundreds of times hotter than the star below. This high temperature remains a mystery more than 60 years after it was first measured.

Mystery #2—the solar wind: The sun spews a hot, million mph wind of charged particles throughout the solar system. Planets, comets, asteroids—they all feel it. Curiously, there is no organized wind close to the sun's surface, yet out among the planets there blows a veritable gale. Somewhere in between, some unknown agent gives the solar wind its great velocity. The question is, what?

"To solve these mysteries, Solar Probe+ will actually enter the corona," says Guhathakurta. "That's where the action is."

The payload consists mainly of instruments designed to sense the environment right around the spacecraft—e.g., a magnetometer, a plasma wave sensor, a dust detector, electron and ion analyzers and so on. "In-situ measurements will tell us what we need to know to unravel the physics of coronal heating and solar wind acceleration," she says.

Right: The re-designed Solar Probe+ spacecraft. [more]

Solar Probe+'s lone remote sensing instrument is the Hemispheric Imager. The "HI" for short is a telescope that will make 3D images of the sun's corona similar to medical CAT scans. The technique, called coronal tomography, is a fundamentally new approach to solar imaging and is only possible because the photography is performed from a moving platform close to the sun, flying through coronal clouds and streamers and imaging them as it flies by and through them.

With a likely launch in May 2015, Solar Probe+ will begin its prime mission near the end of Solar Cycle 24 and finish near the predicted maximum of Solar Cycle 25 in 2022. This would allow the spacecraft to sample the corona and solar wind at many different phases of the solar cycle. It also guarantees that Solar Probe+ will experience a good number of solar storms near the end of its mission. While perilous, this is according to plan: Researchers suspect that many of the most dangerous particles produced by solar storms are energized in the corona—just where Solar Probe+ will be. Solar Probe+ may be able to observe the process in action and show researchers how to forecast Solar Energetic Particle (SEP) events that threaten the health and safety of astronauts.

Solar Probe+'s repeated plunges into the corona will be accomplished by means of Venus flybys. The spacecraft will swing by Venus seven times in six years to bend the probe’s trajectory deeper and deeper into the sun’s atmosphere. Bonus: Although Venus is not a primary target of the mission, astronomers may learn new things about the planet when the heavily-instrumented probe swings by.

"Solar Probe+ is an extraordinary mission of exploration, discovery and deep understanding," says Guhathakurta. "We can't wait to get started."

http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2008/10jun_solarprobe.htm?list1065474

I don't understand something. They're going to the corona and it will need to withstand temperatures of 1400 celsius when it's there. But it later says hat the corona is 1 million degree celsius.

PostmodernProphet
06-11-2008, 04:22 PM
We are going to visit a living, breathing star for the first timethank goodness.....there are some apparent misconceptions we need to clear up.....

Buck Laser
06-11-2008, 04:27 PM
Is it gonna be a manned mission?

PatrickHenry
06-11-2008, 05:41 PM
I don't understand something. They're going to the corona and it will need to withstand temperatures of 1400 celsius when it's there. But it later says hat the corona is 1 million degree celsius.This quote from the article answers your puzzlement, Alonzo.

At closest approach, Solar Probe+ will be 7 million km or 9 solar radii from the sun.

It doesn't enter the corona...just a close flyby. :peace:

Alonzo
06-11-2008, 06:39 PM
I saw that, and I also saw this:

"To solve these mysteries, Solar Probe+ will actually enter the corona," says Guhathakurta. "That's where the action is."

PatrickHenry
06-11-2008, 06:57 PM
Sort of incompatible statements, huh?

Alonzo
06-11-2008, 06:58 PM
Yup. It's from NASA's website which makes the conflicting statements strange. I'd expect it from a normal paper, not NASA.

micfranklin
06-11-2008, 07:08 PM
Is it gonna be a manned mission?

I don't know many people who can stand temperatures nearing 1 million degrees, F or C.

Truth_and_Power
06-11-2008, 08:15 PM
I don't know many people who can stand temperatures nearing 1 million degrees, F or C.

They could send bill clinton.. he made it through being trapped between a pissed off hillary and an impeachment-oriented newt gingrich. That's gotta be pretty close to a million Celsius.

Perhaps they are going to dip into the very edge of the corona at one point. I imagine the million degree reading is from the inner edge of the corona.

There are a lot of guesses in our current theory of how the sun works. It would be very beneficial for us to learn what it is really made of and how it works. I have heard that it may not actually be all gas as was once thought to be definite.

MCTHOUSAND
06-11-2008, 09:41 PM
If they go at night the probe would probably survive.

Easy90
06-11-2008, 10:12 PM
Crap! You beat me to it! LOL!

GhostintheMachine
06-11-2008, 10:14 PM
brilliant.

Buck Laser
06-11-2008, 10:21 PM
If they go at night the probe would probably survive.
You're a Texas Aggie, right? :clapper:

MCTHOUSAND
06-11-2008, 10:33 PM
Naw, just lived in Texas for over 40 years and my step daughter graduated from Texas A&M. I kid her about using her diploma for handicapped parking.

Easy90
06-11-2008, 11:31 PM
The Agro-Americans are a put upon minority.

jafar00
06-12-2008, 09:00 AM
If they go at night the probe would probably survive.

Thanks for making me laugh. My new secretary now thinks I'm mad :dork: