Illustration of NASA’s BioSentinel spacecraft as it
enters a heliocentric orbit. BioSentinel collected data during the May 2024
geomagnetic storm that hit Earth to learn more about the impacts of radiation
in deep space.
NASA/Daniel Rutter
In May 2024, a geomagnetic storm hit Earth, sending auroras across the
planet’s skies in a once-in-a-generation light display. These dazzling sights
are possible because of the interaction of coronal mass ejections – explosions
of plasma and magnetic field from the Sun – with Earth’s magnetic field, which
protects us from the radiation the Sun spits out during turbulent storms.
But what might happen to humans
beyond the safety of Earth’s protection? This question is essential as NASA
plans to send humans to the Moon and on to Mars. During the May storm, the
small spacecraft BioSentinel was collecting data to learn more about the
impacts of radiation in deep space.
“We wanted to take advantage of the
unique stage of the solar cycle we’re in – the solar maximum, when the Sun is
at its most active – so that we can continue to monitor the space radiation
environment,” said Sergio Santa Maria, principal investigator for BioSentinel’s
spaceflight mission at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon
Valley. “These data are relevant not just to the heliophysics community but
also to understand the radiation environment for future crewed missions into
deep space.”
BioSentinel – a small satellite about the size of a cereal box – is currently over 30 million miles from Earth, orbiting the Sun, where it weathered May’s coronal mass ejection without protection from a planetary magnetic field. Preliminary analysis of the data collected indicates that even though this was an extreme geomagnetic storm, that is, a storm that disturbs Earth’s magnetic field, it was considered just a moderate solar radiation storm, meaning it did not produce a great increase in hazardous solar particles. Therefore, such a storm did not pose any major issue to terrestrial lifeforms, even if they were unprotected as BioSentinel was. These measurements provide useful information for scientists trying to understand how solar radiation storms move through space and where their effects – and potential impacts on life beyond Earth – are most intense.
NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory captured this image
of a solar flare on May 11, 2024. The image shows a subset of extreme
ultraviolet light that highlights the extremely hot material in flares.
NASA/SDO
The original mission of BioSentinel was to study samples of yeast in deep space. Though
these yeast samples are no longer alive, BioSentinel has adapted and continues
to be a novel platform for studying the potential impacts of deep space
conditions on life beyond the protection of Earth’s atmosphere and
magnetosphere. The spacecraft’s biosensor instrument collects data about the
radiation in deep space. Over a year and a half after its launch in Nov. 2022,
BioSentinel retreats farther away from Earth, providing data of increasing
value to scientists.
“Even though the biological part of
the BioSentinel mission was completed a few months after launch, we believe
that there is significant scientific value in continuing with the mission,”
said Santa Maria. “The fact that the CubeSat continues to operate and that we
can communicate with it, highlights the potential use of the spacecraft and
many of its subsystems and components for future long-term missions beyond low
Earth orbit.”
When we see auroras in the sky, they can serve as a stunning reminder of all the forces we cannot see that govern our cosmic neighborhood. As NASA and its partners seek to understand more about space environments, platforms like BioSentinel are essential to learn more about the risks of surviving beyond Earth’s sphere of protection.
By: Frank Tavares
Source: NASA’s
BioSentinel Studies Solar Radiation as Earth Watches Aurora - NASA
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