An artist's concept of NASA's Wind spacecraft outside
of Earth's magnetosphere.
NASA
Picture it: 1994. The first World
Wide Web conference took place in Geneva, the first Chunnel train traveled
under the English Channel, and just three years after the end of the Cold War,
the first Russian instrument on a U.S. spacecraft launched into deep space from
Cape Canaveral. The mission to study the solar wind, aptly named Wind, held
promise for heliophysicists and astrophysicists around the world to investigate
basic plasma processes in the solar wind barreling toward Earth — key
information for helping us understand and potentially mitigate the space
weather environment surrounding our home planet.
Thirty years later, Wind continues
to deliver on that promise from about a million miles away at the first
Earth-Sun Lagrange Point (L1). This location is gravitationally balanced
between Earth and the Sun, providing excellent fuel economy that requires mere
puffs of thrust to stay in place.
According to Lynn Wilson, who is the Wind project scientist at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, fuel is only one indicator of Wind’s life expectancy, however. “Based on fuel alone, Wind can continue flying until 2074,” he said. “On the other hand, its ability to return data hinges on the last surviving digital tape recorder onboard.”
An artist’s concept shows a closeup of the Wind
spacecraft.
NASA
Wind launched with two digital tape
recorders to record data from all the instruments on the spacecraft and provide
reports on the spacecraft’s thermal conditions, orientation, and overall
health. Each recorder has two tape decks, A and B, which Wilson affectionately
refers to as “fancy eight-tracks.”
After six years of service, the
first digital tape recorder failed in 2000 along with its two tape decks,
forcing mission operators to switch to the second one. Tape Deck A on that one
started showing signs of wear in 2016, so the mission operators now use Tape
Deck B as the primary deck, with A as a backup.
“They built redundancy into the digital tape recorder system by building two of them, but you can never predict how technology will perform when it’s a million miles away, bathing in ionizing radiation,” said Wilson. “We’re fortunate that after 30 years, we still have two functioning tape decks.”
Wind launched on Nov. 1, 1994, on a Delta IV rocket
from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida.
NASA
Bonus Science
When Wind launched on Nov. 1, 1994,
nobody could have possibly predicted that exactly 30 years later, NASA would be
kicking off “Bonus Science” month in the Heliophysics Big Year. Beyond the mission’s incredible track record of
mesmerizing discoveries about the solar wind — some detailed on its 25th anniversary — Wind continues to deliver with bonus science abound.
Opportunity and Collaborative Discovery
Along its circuitous journey to L1,
Wind dipped in and out of Earth’s magnetosphere more than 65 times, capturing
the largest whistler wave — a low-frequency radio wave racing across Earth’s
magnetic field — ever recorded in Earth’s Van Allen radiation belts. Wind also
traveled ahead of and behind Earth — about 150 times our planet’s diameter in
both directions, informing potential future missions that would operate in
those areas with extreme exposure to the solar wind. It even took a side quest
to the Moon, cruising through the lunar wake, a shadow devoid of solar wind on
the far side of the Moon.
Later, from its permanent home at
L1, Wind was among several corroborating spacecraft that helped confirm what
scientists believe is the brightest gamma-ray burst to occur since the dawn of human civilization.
The burst, GRB 221009A, was first detected by NASA’s Fermi
Gamma-ray Space Telescope in October 2022. Although not in its primary science objectives, Wind
carries two bonus instruments designed to observe gamma-ray bursts that helped
scientists confirm the burst’s origin in the Sagitta constellation.
Academic Inspiration
More than 7,200
research papers have been published using Wind data, and the mission has supported
more than 100 graduate and post-graduate degrees.
Wilson was one of those degree
candidates. When Wind launched, Wilson was in sixth grade, on the football,
baseball, and wrestling teams, with spare time spent playing video games and
reading science fiction. He had a knack for science and considered becoming a
medical doctor or an engineer before committing to his love of physics, which
ultimately led to his current position as Wind’s project scientist. While
pursuing his doctorate, he worked with Adam Szabo who was the Wind project
scientist at NASA Goddard at the time and used Wind data to study
interplanetary collisionless shock waves. Szabo eventually hired Wilson to work on the Wind
mission team at Goddard.
Also in sixth grade at the time,
Joe Westlake, NASA Heliophysics division director, was into soccer and music,
and was a voracious reader consumed with Tolkein’s stories about Middle Earth.
Now he leads the NASA office that manages Wind.
“It’s amazing to think that Lynn
Wilson and I were in middle school, and the original mission designers and
scientists have long since retired,” said Westlake. “When a mission makes it to
30 years, you can’t help but be inspired by the role it has played not only in
scientific discovery, but in the careers of multiple generations of
scientists.”
By Erin Mahoney
NASA Headquarters, Washington
Source: 30 Years On, NASA’s Wind Is a Windfall for Studying our Neighborhood in Space - NASA Science
No comments:
Post a Comment