A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket lifts off from Vandenberg
Space Force Base, carrying NASA's EZIE spacecraft into orbit.
SpaceX
Under the nighttime California sky, NASA’s EZIE (Electrojet Zeeman Imaging
Explorer) mission launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket at 11:43 p.m.
PDT on March 14.
Taking off from Vandenberg Space
Force Base near Santa Barbara, the EZIE mission’s trio of small satellites will
fly in a pearls-on-a-string configuration approximately 260 to 370 miles above
Earth’s surface to map the auroral electrojets, powerful electric currents that
flow through our upper atmosphere in the polar regions where auroras glow in
the sky.
At approximately 2 a.m. PDT on
March 15, the EZIE satellites were successfully deployed. Within the next 10
days, the spacecraft will send signals to verify they are in good health and
ready to embark on their 18-month mission.
“NASA has leaned into small
missions that can provide compelling science while accepting more risk. EZIE
represents excellent science being executed by an excellent team, and it is
delivering exactly what NASA is looking for,” said Jared Leisner, program
executive for EZIE at NASA Headquarters in Washington.
The electrojets — and their visible
counterparts, the auroras — are generated during solar
storms when
tremendous amounts of energy get transferred into Earth’s upper atmosphere from
the solar
wind. Each of the
EZIE spacecraft will map the electrojets, advancing our understanding of the
physics of how Earth interacts with its surrounding space. This understanding
will apply not only to our own planet but also to any magnetized planet in our
solar system and beyond. The mission will also help scientists create models
for predicting space weather to mitigate its disruptive impacts on our society.
“It is truly incredible to see our
spacecraft flying and making critical measurements, marking the start of an
exciting new chapter for the EZIE mission,” said Nelli Mosavi-Hoyer, project
manager for EZIE at the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel,
Maryland. “I am very proud of the dedication and hard work of our team. This
achievement is a testament to the team’s perseverance and expertise, and I look
forward to the valuable insights EZIE will bring to our understanding of
Earth’s electrojets and space weather.”
Instead of using propulsion to
control their polar orbit, the spacecraft will actively use drag experienced
while flying through the upper atmosphere to individually tune their spacing.
Each successive spacecraft will fly over the same region 2 to 10 minutes after
the former.
“Missions have studied these
currents before, but typically either at the very large or very small scales,”
said Larry Kepko, EZIE mission scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center
in Greenbelt, Maryland. “EZIE will help us understand how these currents form
and evolve, at scales we’ve never probed.”
The mission team is also working to
distribute magnetometer kits called EZIE-Mag, which are available to teachers, students, and science enthusiasts who
want to take their own measurements of the Earth-space electrical current
system. EZIE-Mag data will be combined with EZIE measurements made from space
to assemble a clear picture of this vast electrical current circuit.
The EZIE mission is funded by the
Heliophysics Division within NASA’s Science Mission Directorate and is managed
by the Explorers Program Office at NASA Goddard. The Johns Hopkins Applied
Physics Laboratory leads the mission for NASA. Blue Canyon Technologies in
Boulder, Colorado, built the CubeSats, and NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Southern California built the Microwave Electrojet Magnetogram, which will map
the electrojets, for each of the three satellites.
For the latest mission updates,
follow NASA’s EZIE blog.
By Brett Molina
Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory
Source: NASA’s EZIE Launches on Mission to Study Earth’s Electrojets - NASA Science
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