NASA’s Parker Solar Probe launched from Florida Sunday to
begin its journey to the Sun, where it will undertake a landmark mission. The
spacecraft will transmit its first science observations in December, beginning
a revolution in our understanding of the star that makes life on Earth
possible.
Roughly the size of a small car, the spacecraft lifted off at
3:31 a.m. EDT on a United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket from Space
Launch Complex-37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. At 5:33 a.m., the
mission operations manager reported that the spacecraft was healthy and
operating normally.
The mission’s findings will help researchers improve their
forecasts of space weather events, which have the potential to damage
satellites and harm astronauts on orbit, disrupt radio communications and, at
their most severe, overwhelm power grids.
During the first week of its journey, the spacecraft will
deploy its high-gain antenna and magnetometer boom. It also will perform the
first of a two-part deployment of its electric field antennas. Instrument
testing will begin in early September and last approximately four weeks, after
which Parker Solar Probe can begin science operations.
“Today’s launch was the culmination of six decades of
scientific study and millions of hours of effort,” said project manager Andy
Driesman, of the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in
Laurel, Maryland. “Now, Parker Solar Probe is operating normally and, on its
way, to begin a seven-year mission of extreme science.”
Over the next two months, Parker Solar Probe will fly towards
Venus, performing its first Venus gravity assist in early October – a maneuver
a bit like a handbrake turn – that whips the spacecraft around the planet,
using Venus’s gravity to trim the spacecraft’s orbit tighter around the Sun.
This first flyby will place Parker Solar Probe in position in early November to
fly as close as 15 million miles from the Sun – within the blazing solar
atmosphere, known as the corona – closer than anything made by humanity has
ever gone before.
Throughout its seven-year mission, Parker Solar Probe will
make six more Venus flybys and 24 total passes by the Sun, journeying steadily
closer to the Sun until it makes its closest approach at 3.8 million miles. At
this point, the probe will be moving at roughly 430,000 miles per hour, setting
the record for the fastest-moving object made by humanity.
Parker Solar Probe will set its sights on the corona to solve
long-standing, foundational mysteries of our Sun. What is the secret of the
scorching corona, which is more than 300 times hotter than the Sun’s surface,
thousands of miles below? What drives the supersonic solar wind – the constant
stream of solar material that blows through the entire solar system? And
finally, what accelerates solar energetic particles, which can reach speeds up
to more than half the speed of light as they rocket away from the Sun?
Scientists have sought these answers for more than 60 years,
but the investigation requires sending a probe right through the unrelenting
heat of the corona. Today, this is finally possible with cutting-edge thermal
engineering advances that can protect the mission on its daring journey.
Parker Solar Probe carries four instrument suites designed to
study magnetic fields, plasma and energetic particles, and capture images of
the solar wind. The University of California, Berkeley, U.S. Naval Research
Laboratory in Washington, University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and Princeton
University in New Jersey lead these investigations.
Parker Solar Probe is part of NASA’s Living with a Star program to explore aspects of the Sun-Earth system that directly affect life and society. The Living with a Star program is managed by the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate in Washington. APL designed and built, and operates the spacecraft.
The mission is named for Eugene Parker, the physicist who
first theorized the existence of the solar wind in 1958. It’s the first NASA
mission to be named for a living researcher.
Source: NASA
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