Scientist wins solar probe instrument award, place on solar mission
October 1st, 2010 - 2:41 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Oct 1 (ANI): An astrophysicist at NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala., and his science team have secured a proposal award of 8.2 million dollars to help build parts for and test an instrument for the Solar Probe Plus flagship mission to directly sample the Sun’s atmosphere.
“This is the equivalent of a Hubble-class mission for solar physics. We expect the data collected on this mission to have a dramatic and revolutionary impact on the field of solar astrophysics,” said Dr. Jonathan Cirtain.
The Solar Probe Plus will explore a region no other spacecraft has ever encountered. It is a spacecraft the size of a small car that will plunge directly into the Sun’s atmosphere, approximately four million miles from the physical surface of the star.
“While other instruments are hidden, we’ll be right out there getting blasted by the Sun, literally “touching” a star for the first time,” said Justin Kasper, SWEAP principal investigator and a Smithsonian astronomer.
Cirtain and his team now are developing instrument prototypes that will specifically count the most abundant particles in the solar wind - electrons, protons and helium ions - and measure their properties.
The investigation also is designed to sweep up the solar wind in a special conductive metal cup, called a Faraday cup, and determine the speed and direction of the Sun’s particles.
The mission will answer the two pertinent questions scientists have been struggling with for a long time - Why is the Sun’s outer atmosphere so much hotter than the Sun’s visible surface, and what propels the solar wind that affects Earth and our solar system? - said Dick Fisher, director of NASA’s Heliophysics Division in Washington. (ANI)
- NASA eyes unprecedented mission to unlock Sun's biggest mysteries - Sep 03, 2010
- NASA to reveal first views of the entire Sun on super Sun-day - Feb 05, 2011
- NASA Gears Up For Solar Probe Plus To Unravel The Mysteries Of Sun - Sep 07, 2010
- NASA's Messenger set to solve tantalizing mysteries about Mercury - Mar 16, 2011
- NASA's Mars rover begins research in space - Dec 14, 2011
- New Sun images released by NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory - Apr 22, 2010
- Japanese satellite Hinode spots 2 huge holes in Sun - Feb 14, 2011
- NASA's IBEX spacecraft reveals space as never seen before - Aug 17, 2010
- Sun's new close-up images could unlock many secrets - Apr 22, 2010
- Mystery over Sun's missing sunspots over 11-year cycle solved - Mar 03, 2011
- NASA's mission to reveal the sun's inner workings - Feb 12, 2010
- NASA's Messenger spacecraft begins historic orbit around mercury - Mar 18, 2011
- NASA instrument shows never-before-seen Sun's innermost corona - Jan 05, 2011
- NASA to explore earth's radiation belts - Aug 24, 2012
- Voyager Spacecraft is Near Solar System's Edge - Dec 15, 2010
Tags: conductive metal, direction of the sun, dr jonathan, electrons protons, faraday cup, helium ions, hotter than the sun, huntsville ala, justin kasper, marshall space flight, marshall space flight center, outer atmosphere, physical surface, revolutionary impact, science team, solar astrophysics, solar physics, solar probe, space flight center, visible surface