NASA Unveils Historic First Mission to the Corona
The
spacecraft will travel 430,000 miles per hour and battle temperatures
up to 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit within the sun’s corona, the research
team behind the historic journey said at a news conference Wednesday.
The spacecraft will come seven times closer to the sun than any other
mission before it.
“We
will finally touch the sun,” said Nicola Fox, a mission project
scientist at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in
Maryland.
Fox,
who called the project the “coolest, hottest, fastest mission under the
sun,” said it would finally help NASA answer seemingly “simple”
questions that have long stumped scientists. “Why is the corona hotter
than the surface of the sun? That defies the laws of nature,” she said.
“We have not been able to answer these questions without actually taking
a probe into the sun.”
Fox
said the mission would also improve forecasts of major space weather
events and provide critical information on how the sun works and how
Earth’s environment responds to the sun.
The
spacecraft, which will feature a newly developed heat shield, is
currently being built and undergoing rigorous testing to withstand the
extreme speeds and changing temperatures, Fox said. Final testing on it
will be conducted at the end of the year.
The
mission was 60 years in the making after solar astrophysicist Eugene
Parker first began researching what he called the “primary puzzle in the
universe.” “It really is something amazing,” he said Wednesday, calling
the space mission “heroic.”
The
spacecraft set to embark for the sun was renamed in his honor during
NASA’s announcement at the University of Chicago, ahead of the
researcher’s 90th birthday. The Parker Solar Probe will come within 4 million miles of the sun’s surface.
“Hooray for Solar Probe,” Parker said. (Time)
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