High above us, particles from the Sun hurtle toward Earth, colliding with the upper atmosphere and creating powerful explosions in a murky process called magnetic reconnection. A single magnetic reconnection event can release as much energy as the entire United States uses in a day.
NASA’s new TRACERS (Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites) mission will study magnetic reconnection, answering key questions about how it shapes the impacts of the Sun and space weather on our daily lives.
NASA's TRACERS mission, or the Tandem
Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites, will fly in
low Earth orbit through the polar cusps, funnel-shaped holes in the magnetic
field, to study magnetic reconnection and its effects in Earth's atmosphere.
Download full video. Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center/Lacey Young
The TRACERS spacecraft are slated to launch
no earlier than late July 2025 aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Space
Launch Complex 4 East at Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. The two
TRACERS spacecraft will orbit Earth to study how the solar wind — a continuous
outpouring of electrically charged particles from the Sun — interacts with
Earth’s magnetic shield, the magnetosphere.
What Is Magnetic Reconnection?
As solar wind flows out from the Sun, it
carries the Sun’s embedded magnetic field out across the solar system. Reaching
speeds over one million miles per hour, this soup of charged particles and
magnetic field plows into planets in its path.
“Earth’s magnetosphere acts as a protective
bubble that deflects the brunt of the solar wind’s force. You can think of it
as a bar magnet that's rotating and floating around in space,” said John
Dorelli, TRACERS mission science lead at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in
Greenbelt, Maryland. “As the solar wind collides with Earth’s magnetic field,
this interaction builds up energy that can cause the magnetic field lines to
snap and explosively fling away nearby particles at high speeds — this is magnetic
reconnection.”
Openings in Earth’s magnetic field at the
North and South Poles, called polar cusps, act as funnels allowing charged
particles to stream down towards Earth and collide with atmospheric gases.
These phenomena are pieces of the space weather system that is in constant
motion around our planet — whose impacts range from breathtaking auroras to
disruption of communications systems and power grids. In May 2024, Earth
experienced the strongest geomagnetic storm in more than 20 years, which
affected high-voltage power lines and transformers, forced trans-Atlantic
flights to change course, and caused GPS-guided tractors to veer off-course.
How Will TRACERS Study Magnetic
Reconnection?
The TRACERS mission’s twin satellites, each a bit larger than a washing machine, will fly in tandem, one behind the other, in a relatively low orbit about 360 miles above Earth. Traveling over 16,000 mph, each satellite hosts a suite of instruments to measure different aspects of extremely hot, ionized gas called plasma and how it interacts with Earth’s magnetosphere.
An artist’s concept of the twin TRACERS
satellites in orbit above Earth.
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
The satellites will focus where Earth’s
magnetic field dips down to the ground at the North polar cusp. By placing the
twin TRACERS satellites in a Sun-synchronous orbit, they always pass through
Earth’s dayside polar cusp, studying thousands of reconnection events at these
concentrated areas.
This will build a step-by-step picture of
how magnetic reconnection changes over time and from Earth’s dayside to its
nightside.
NASA’s TRICE-2 mission also studied
magnetic reconnection near Earth, but with a pair of sounding rockets launched
into the northern polar cusp over the Norwegian Sea in 2018.
“The TRICE mission took great data. It took
a snapshot of the Earth system in one state. It proved that these instruments
could make this kind of measurement and achieve this kind of science,” said
David Miles, TRACERS principal investigator at the University of Iowa. “But the
system's more complicated than that. The TRACERS mission demonstrates how you
can use multi-spacecraft technology to get a picture of how things are moving
and evolving.”
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