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SUN EXPLORATION |
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The spacecraft exploration of the Sun, began in earnest
with the United States' Pioneer spacecraft and the Earth orbiting satellites
OSO (Orbiting Solar Observatory) and OGO (Orbiting Geophysical Observatory).
The very first solar observing spacecraft was Pioneer 4, launched in 1959.
From a solar orbit, Pioneer 4 studied solar flares and the Earth's magnetic
field. Successive Pioneers studied the Earth's upper atmosphere, the magnetosphere,
and collected data on solar radiation levels, the solar wind, and cosmic
rays. Since 1959, more than 70 spacecraft have been used to investigate
our nearest star |
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One of the most exciting periods in the study of the Sun
came in 1973 and 1974, when astronauts aboard the Apollo programme space-station
Skylab were able to carry out direct observations of solar phenomena in
X-ray and ultraviolet wavelengths. The Skylab crews collected many thousands
of impressive, and very useful images and monitor a wide range of solar
activity including solar flares, prominences, bright-spots, coronal transients,
and coronal holes. The Skylab mission advanced our understanding of the
nature of the Sun dramatically. |
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A succession of less expensive unmanned probes followed
Skylab, these included Explorer 49, (NASA ) in 1973; Helios-1 and 2, a
joint NASA / German spacecraft in 1974 and 1976; and the Solar Maximum
Mission (SMM) in 1980. |
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The objective of the Solar Maximum Mission (SMM) was to
observe solar flares during a period of maximum solar activity. A mechanical
fault at the beginning of the mission nearly put paid to SMM but was revived
in a rescue mission (STS-41C in 1984). Shuttle astronauts made rendezvous
with and repaired SMM, which went on to collect and return data until
1989. |
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Three more solar observing missions were launched during
the 1990s: Ulysses (1990), Yohkoh (1991), and SOHO, (1995); in addition
to the small Shuttle launched and retrieved solar satellites- SPARTANS
1 to 3, flown in 1993, 1994, and 1995. |
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Ulysses, a joint NASA / ESA mission, was designed to observe
the environment at the polar regions of the Sun. It first flew outward
to Jupiter in order to gain a gravitational boost and allow it to travel
out of the ecliptic plane and over the poles of the Sun. Ulysses' first
solar approach in June 1994; the spacecraft crossed the solar equator
in February 1995, the north pole in June 1995, and another south polar
pass was made in 2000. Bristling with instruments, among those carried
by Ulysses were: magnetometres, a solar wind plasma experiment, an array
of particle detectors, a radio and plasma-wave experiment, a solar-flare
x-ray and cosmic gamma-ray burst experiment, a cosmic dust experiment,
and coronal sounding experiment. |
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The SOHO (Solar and Heliospheric Observatory) spacecraft,
operated by NASA and ESA, was equipped to observe velocity oscillations
and radiance variations across the suns surface; their behavior enabling
astronomers to build a better picture of the Sun's structure. Among SOHO's
other tasks were to: study the Sun's outer atmosphere- the corona, and
the solar wind generated there; to monitor the charged gases (plasma)
close to the Sun; and monitor the solar wind in the proximity of the spacecraft.
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SOHO is currently in a halo orbit about the Sun, at Earth's
L1 Lagrange point, 1.5 million kilometres away from us; which allows it
to make uninterrupted solar observations. A spin-off from solar observation
are is discovery of comets when they pass close to the Sun, which would
otherwise would probably have gone undetected. The LASCO coronagraph instrument
aboard SOHO, masks the very bright visible surface in order to observe
the space surrounding the Sun; to date more than 500 comets have been
found in LASCO images, many by amateur observers searching the images
which are made available on the internet. |
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New missions |
The more recently launched Genesis (2001) collects particles
of solar wind for return to Earth. The particles embed themselves in a
wafer thin collector array which the spacecraft unfurled when it reached
the L1 Langrage point. After two years collecting Genesis will return
to Earth, the sample capsule re-entering the atmosphere for a mid-air
recovery. The particles will undergo very detailed analysis - in comparing
them with the known composition of the planets and asteroids, it is hoped
these bits of the Sun will shed light on the formation and early development
of the Sun and the Solar System. |
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Another new mission is HESSI (High Energy Solar Spectroscopic
Imager). Successfully launched in 2003, HESSI's science objectives are
to study solar flares (made up of X-rays and other emissions), and their
behavior - in particular, to explore the poorly understood mechanism for
the gas reaching very high temperatures in the solar atmosphere. HESSI
will acquire simultaneous high-resolution X-ray images, gamma-ray data
and high-resolution spectroscopy; which will be combined to build a detailed
energy spectrum across images of the energy release sites. |
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Future solar observation missions include Solar-B, a Japanese
Space Agency (ISAS) mission which will continue the work of Yohkoh (Solar-A).
Solar-B would carry optical, extreme ultra-violet and X-ray sensors. Its
main science goal, to explore the Sun's magnetic field and corona and
determine how changes in the Sun's magnetic field are related to changing
solar output. |
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STEREO (Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory), scheduled
for launch in 2005, comprises two almost identical spacecraft which will
be used to obtain 3D stereoscopic data of the violent eruptions from the
solar surface known as CMEs (coronal mass ejections). The STEREO instruments
will be used in conjunction with Earth-based detectors and monitor the
build up, the release of energy and the form and trajectory of CMEs in
three-dimensional views. A better understanding of the behavior of the
CMEs and is very important, as when they reach Earth they generate electromagnetic
storms detrimental to satellites, communication and navigation systems,
and can cause electrical power failures. |
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