From its outpost 1.5 million km away from Earth in the direction of the Sun, SOHO enjoys uninterrupted views of our star. It has provided a nearly continuous record of our Sun's activity for close to three 11-year-long solar cycles.
"It is testament to the ingenuity of our engineers, operators and scientists, and to international collaboration, that this mission has exceeded all expectations," says Prof. Carole Mundell, ESA Director of Science. "SOHO has overcome nail-biting challenges to become one of the longest-operating space missions of all time."
"The SOHO mission is a great example of the incredible partnerships between NASA and ESA," adds Nicky Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "Congratulations to the NASA and ESA teams on an amazing thirty years working together."
The mission has not been without drama. Two-and-a-half years after launch, the spacecraft suffered a critical error, spinning out of control and losing contact with Earth. An international rescue team worked tirelessly for three months to locate and recover it.
Then, in November and December 1998, the spacecraft's stabilising gyroscopes failed and a new race to save the mission began. By February 1999, new software enabled the spacecraft to fly without the need for gyroscopes, and it has been revolutionising solar science ever since.
"SOHO pioneered new fields in solar science. It is a game-changer in the study of space weather, providing real-time monitoring of the Sun to forecast potentially dangerous solar storms heading towards Earth, and its legacy continues to guide future missions," says Daniel Muller, ESA Project Scientist for SOHO and Solar Orbiter.
"SOHO is still producing high-quality data on a daily basis, and with hundreds of papers being published every year, its scientific productivity remains very high."
Daniel's new paper 'SOHO's 30-year legacy of observing the Sun' is published in Nature Astronomy on Tuesday 2 December 2025.
Here are five highlights from the last five years:
Thanks to SOHO's long lifetime, scientists have used helioseismology to solve an enduring mystery: plasma flows along a single loop, or cell, in each of the Sun's hemispheres - not multiple cells as previously thought.
The data show that it takes about 22 years for plasma to complete an entire loop around this single 'conveyor belt', flowing from the surface near the equator up to the poles, then traveling back down deep inside towards the equator. This matches the timeline of the Sun's magnetic cycle, explaining how sunspots - regions where intense magnetic fields break through the Sun's surface - emerge progressively closer to the equator over the solar cycle.
The total energy output of the Sun changes very little - on average, by only 0.06% over the solar cycle. By contrast, the variation in extreme ultraviolet radiation is substantial, doubling between solar minimum and maximum. Solar extreme ultraviolet radiation significantly influences the temperature and chemistry in Earth's upper atmosphere, but is not a direct driver of the global warming trends observed near Earth's surface.
The 'Promoting Research and Observations of Space Weather to Improve the Forecasting of Tomorrow' (PROSWIFT) act specifically mentions SOHO's Large Angle and Spectrometric Coronagraph (LASCO) instrument.
LASCO is a coronagraph, a telescope with a disc masking the centre of view. By blocking out the direct light coming from the Sun, the instrument can see light from the surrounding atmosphere, called the corona. This allows us to see coronal mass ejections - large eruptions of solar material and magnetic fields - as they set off from the Sun, providing up to three days warning of potentially disruptive incoming space weather reaching Earth.
Not all comets seen by SOHO are sungrazers. For example, it also beautifully captured Comet Tsuchinshan - ATLAS, also called the Great Comet of 2024, a non-periodic comet from the outer reaches of the Solar System.
SOHO discovered its 5000th comet in March 2024, making it the most prolific comet-discoverer in history. Most of these have been found by citizen scientists worldwide through the Sungrazer Project. The observations have provided valuable data on the movement, composition and dust production of comets.
For example, the ESA-led Solar Orbiter mission is imaging the solar poles from higher latitude and flying much closer to the Sun, with many of its instruments being successors of SOHO's. Similarly, NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory carries improved versions of SOHO's instruments to continue the legacy that SOHO began in areas of full-disc imaging and helioseismology. Moreover, SOHO frequently contributes to 'multipoint' measurements, providing essential context for Solar Orbiter and NASA's Parker Solar Probe as they fly along their own unique orbits around the Sun.
Even more recently, ESA's Proba-3 took to the skies to open up new views of the Sun's faint corona, while the Agency's upcoming Vigil mission will be the first to monitor the Sun from the 'side', detecting solar storms before they roll into SOHO's line-of-sight.
"SOHO is an all-round shining success, thanks to the dedication of the teams keeping this incredible machine flying," says Daniel. "Its science remains valuable and relevant, serving generations of scientists, and I'm certain that its legacy will continue to guide solar science for decades to come."
Research Report:SOHO's 30-year legacy of observing the Sun
Related Links
European Space Agency
Solar Science News at SpaceDaily
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