An artist's concept showing Parker Solar Probe. Credits: NASA/APL
Operations teams
have confirmed NASA’s mission to “touch” the Sun survived its record-breaking
closest approach to the solar surface on Dec. 24, 2024.
Breaking its
previous record by flying just 3.8 million miles above the surface of the Sun,
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe hurtled through the solar atmosphere at a blazing
430,000 miles per hour — faster than any human-made object has ever moved. A
beacon tone received late on Dec. 26 confirmed the spacecraft had made it
through the encounter safely and is operating normally.
This pass, the
first of more to come at this distance, allows the spacecraft to conduct
unrivaled scientific measurements with the potential to change our
understanding of the Sun.
“Flying this close to the Sun is a historic moment in
humanity’s first mission to a star.”
Nicky fox,
NASA Associate Administrator, Science Mission Directorate
NASA's Parker Solar Probe survived its
record-breaking closest approach to the solar surface on Dec. 24, 2024.
Breaking its previous record by flying just 3.8 million miles above the surface
of the Sun, the spacecraft hurtled through the solar atmosphere at a blazing
430,000 miles per hour — faster than any human-made object has ever moved.
Credits: NASA
This video can be freely shared and
downloaded at https://svs.gsfc.nasa.gov/14741.
Parker Solar Probe has spent the last six
years setting up for this moment. Launched in 2018, the spacecraft used seven
flybys of Venus to gravitationally direct it ever closer to the Sun. With its
last Venus flyby on Nov. 6, 2024, the spacecraft reached its optimal orbit.
This oval-shaped orbit brings the spacecraft an ideal distance from the Sun
every three months — close enough to study our Sun’s mysterious processes but
not too close to become overwhelmed by the Sun’s heat and damaging radiation.
The spacecraft will remain in this orbit for the remainder of its primary
mission.
“Parker Solar Probe is braving one of the
most extreme environments in space and exceeding all expectations,” said Nour
Rawafi, the project scientist for Parker Solar Probe at the Johns Hopkins
Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), which designed, built, and operates the
spacecraft from its campus in Laurel, Maryland. “This mission is ushering a new
golden era of space exploration, bringing us closer than ever to unlocking the
Sun’s deepest and most enduring mysteries.”
Close to the Sun, the spacecraft relies on a carbon foam shield to protect it from the extreme heat in the upper solar atmosphere called the corona, which can exceed 1 million degrees Fahrenheit. The shield was designed to reach temperatures of 2,600 degrees Fahrenheit — hot enough to melt steel — while keeping the instruments behind it shaded at a comfortable room temperature. In the hot but low-density corona, the spacecraft’s shield is expected to warm to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit.
The spacecraft’s
record close distance of 3.8 million miles may sound far, but on cosmic scales
it’s incredibly close. If the solar system was scaled down with the distance
between the Sun and Earth the length of a football field, Parker Solar Probe
would be just four yards from the end zone — close enough to pass within the
tenuous outer atmosphere of the Sun known as the corona.
NASA/APL
“It’s monumental
to be able to get a spacecraft this close to the Sun,” said John Wirzburger,
the Parker Solar Probe mission systems engineer at APL. “This is a challenge
the space science community has wanted to tackle since 1958 and had spent
decades advancing the technology to make it possible.”
By flying
through the solar corona, Parker Solar Probe can take measurements that help
scientists better understand how the region gets so hot, trace the origin of
the solar wind (a constant flow of material escaping the Sun), and discover how
energetic particles are accelerated to half the speed of light.
“The data is so
important for the science community because it gives us another vantage point,”
said Kelly Korreck, a program scientist at NASA Headquarters and heliophysicist
who worked on one of the mission’s instruments. “By getting firsthand accounts
of what’s happening in the solar atmosphere, Parker Solar Probe has
revolutionized our understanding of the Sun.”
Previous passes
have already aided scientists’ understanding of the Sun. When the spacecraft
first passed into the solar atmosphere in 2021, it found the outer boundary of
the corona is wrinkled with spikes and valleys, contrary to what was expected.
Parker Solar Probe also pinpointed the origin of important zig-zag-shaped
structures in the solar wind, called switchbacks, at the visible surface of the
Sun — the photosphere.
Since that initial pass into the Sun, the spacecraft has been spending more time in the corona, where most of the critical physical processes occur.
This conceptual
image shows Parker Solar Probe about to enter the solar corona.
NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Ben Smith
“We now
understand the solar wind and its acceleration away from the Sun,” said Adam
Szabo, the Parker Solar Probe mission scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Maryland. “This close approach will give us more data to
understand how it’s accelerated closer in.”
Parker Solar
Probe has also made discoveries across the inner solar system. Observations
showed how giant solar explosions called coronal mass ejections vacuum up dust
as they sweep across the solar system, and other observations revealed
unexpected findings about solar energetic particles. Flybys of Venus have
documented the planet’s natural radio emissions from its atmosphere, as well as
the first complete image of its orbital dust ring.
So far, the
spacecraft has only transmitted that it’s safe, but soon it will be in a
location that will allow it to downlink the data it collected on this latest
solar pass.
“The data that will come down from the spacecraft will
be fresh information about a place that we, as humanity, have never been.”
Joe Westlake
Heliophysics Division Director, NASA Headquarters
“The data that will come down from the spacecraft will be fresh information about a place that we, as humanity, have never been,” said Joe Westlake, the director of the Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters. “It’s an amazing accomplishment.”
The spacecraft’s next planned close solar passes come on March 22, 2025, and June 19, 2025.
By Mara
Johnson-Groh
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
Source: NASA’s Parker Solar Probe Makes History With Closest Pass to Sun - NASA Science
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