Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. 24/7 Space News .




SOLAR SCIENCE
NASA Calls On APL To Send A Probe To The Sun
by Staff Writers
Baltimore MD (SPX) May 05, 2008


Artist's concept of NASA's Solar Probe spacecraft making its daring pass toward the sun, where it will study the forces that create solar wind. The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., will design and build the spacecraft, on a schedule to launch in 2015. Preliminary designs include a 9-foot-diameter, 6-inch-thick, carbon-foam-filled solar shield atop the spacecraft body, and two sets of solar arrays that would retract or extend as the spacecraft swings toward or away from the sun -- making sure the panels stay at proper temperatures and power levels. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory is sending a spacecraft closer to the sun than any probe has ever gone - and what it finds could revolutionize what we know about our star and the solar wind that influences everything in our solar system.

NASA has tapped APL to develop the ambitious Solar Probe mission, which will study the streams of charged particles the sun hurls into space from a vantage point within the sun's corona - its outer atmosphere - where the processes that heat the corona and produce solar wind occur.

At closest approach Solar Probe would zip past the sun at 125 miles per second, protected by a carbon-composite heat shield that must withstand up to 2,600 degrees Fahrenheit and survive blasts of radiation and energized dust at levels not experienced by any previous spacecraft.

Experts in the U.S. and abroad have grappled with this mission concept for more than 30 years, running into seemingly insurmountable technology and budgetary limitations. But in February an APL-led team completed a Solar Probe engineering and mission design study at NASA's request, detailing just how the robotic mission could be accomplished.

The study team used an APL-led 2005 study as its baseline, but then significantly altered the concept to meet challenging cost and technical conditions provided by NASA.

"We knew we were on the right track," says Andrew Dantzler, Solar Probe project manager at APL. "Now we've put it all together in an innovative package; the technology is within reach, the concept is feasible and the entire mission can be done for less than $750 million [in fiscal 2007 dollars], or about the cost of a medium-class planetary mission. NASA decided it was time."

APL will design and build the spacecraft, on a schedule to launch in 2015. The compact, solar-powered probe would weigh about 1,000 pounds; preliminary designs include a 9-foot-diameter, 6-inch-thick, carbon-foam-filled solar shield atop the spacecraft body.

Two sets of solar arrays would retract or extend as the spacecraft swings toward or away from the sun during several loops around the inner solar system, making sure the panels stay at proper temperatures and power levels. At its closest passes the spacecraft must survive solar intensity more than 500 times what spacecraft experience while orbiting Earth.

Solar Probe will use seven Venus flybys over nearly seven years to gradually shrink its orbit around the sun, coming as close as 4.1 million miles (6.6 million kilometers) to the sun, well within the orbit of Mercury and about eight times closer than any spacecraft has come before.

Solar Probe will employ a combination of in-place and remote measurements to achieve the mission's primary scientific goals: determine the structure and dynamics of the magnetic fields at the sources of solar wind; trace the flow of energy that heats the corona and accelerates the solar wind; determine what mechanisms accelerate and transport energetic particles; and explore dusty plasma near the sun and its influence on solar wind and energetic particle formation. Details will be spelled out in a Solar Probe Science and Technology Definition Team study that NASA will release later this year. NASA will also release a separate Announcement of Opportunity for the spacecraft's science payload.

"Solar Probe is a true mission of exploration," says Dr. Robert Decker, Solar Probe project scientist at APL. "For example, the spacecraft will go close enough to the sun to watch the solar wind speed up from subsonic to supersonic, and it will fly though the birthplace of the highest energy solar particles. And, as with all missions of discovery, Solar Probe is likely to raise more questions than it answers."

APL's experience in developing spacecraft to study the sun-Earth relationship - or to work near the sun - includes ACE, which recently marked its 10th year of sampling energetic particles between Earth and the sun; TIMED, currently examining solar effects on Earth's upper atmosphere; the twin STEREO probes, which have snapped the first 3-D images of explosive solar events called coronal mass ejections; and the Radiation Belt Storm Probes, which will examine the regions of energetic particles trapped by Earth's magnetic field.

Solar Probe will be fortified with heat-resistant technologies developed for APL's MESSENGER spacecraft, which completed its first flyby of Mercury in January and will begin orbiting that planet in 2011. Solar Probe's solar shield concept was partially influenced by designs of MESSENGER's sunshade.

Solar Probe is part of NASA's Living with a Star Program, designed to learn more about the sun and its effects on planetary systems and human activities.

.


Related Links
Living with a Star Program
Solar Science News at SpaceDaily






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SOLAR SCIENCE
Temporary cooling trend may offset warming
New York (UPI) May 2, 2008
German scientists said temporary climate variations may temporarily offset the long-term global warming trend. Researchers from the Leibniz Institute of Marine Sciences and the Max Planck Institute for Meteorology said computer simulations and measurements of ocean temperatures suggest that global warming will weaken slightly during the the next decade. The findings are published ... read more


SOLAR SCIENCE
Shanghai's Own Moon Vehicle Passes Test

China Blasts Off First Data Relay Satellite

KAGUYA Captures First Successful Shooting Of A Full Earth-Rise

New NASA Moon Mission Begins Integration Of Science Instruments

SOLAR SCIENCE
Glaciers Reveal Martian Climate Has Been Recently Active

Andrews Space Wins NASA Exploration Contract

Artificial Intelligence Boosts Science From Mars

New Online Map Reveals Evidence Of The Forces That Once Shaped Mars

SOLAR SCIENCE
SKorea's first astronaut suffers back injury: doctor

Design Begins On Twin Probes That Will Study Radiation Belts

SKorea's first astronaut in hospital with back pain

NASA Officials Turn To Air Force For Guppy Evaluation

SOLAR SCIENCE
China Launches New Space Tracking Ship To Serve Shenzhou VII

Three Rocketeers For Shenzhou

China's space development can pose military threat: Japan

Brazil To Deepen Space Cooperation With China

SOLAR SCIENCE
US Congressional Subcommittee Examines The Status Of The ISS

Expedition 16's Whitson Hands Over Command Of Station

Russia Needs Billions More To Complete It's ISS Segment

NASA Awards Space Station Water Contract To Hamilton Sundstrand

SOLAR SCIENCE
ULA To Launch GRAIL

Zenit Rocket Puts Israeli Satellite Into Orbit

Khrunichev And ILS Announce Quality Initiative

Military And Civilian Telecom Satellites Are Readied For Third Ariane 5 Mission Of 2008

SOLAR SCIENCE
Exo-Planet Roadmap Advisory Team Appointed By ESA

Plan To Identify Watery Earth-Like Planets Develops

Astronomers Listen To An Exoplanet-Host Star And Find Its Birthplace

New Rocky Planet Found In Constellation Leo

SOLAR SCIENCE
SES ASTRA Starts New Orbital Position At 31.5 Degrees East

NASA Ames Partners With m2mi For Small Satellite Development

Graphene-Based Gadgets May Be Just Years Away

Loral Spins A Giant Web In Space As First ICO Bird Comes Alive




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement