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Showing posts sorted by date for query parker probe. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Thursday, July 10, 2025

Closest Images Ever Taken of The Sun’s Atmosphere | NASA Parker Solar Probe

Closest Images Ever Taken of The Sun’s Atmosphere | NASA Parker Solar Probe

On its record-breaking pass by the Sun in December 2024, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe captured stunning new images from within the Sun’s atmosphere. These newly released images—taken closer to the Sun than we have ever been before—are helping scientists better understand the Sun’s influence across the solar system, including events that can affect Earth.

Learn more: https://science.nasa.gov/science-research/heliophysics/nasas-parker-solar-probe-snaps-closest-ever-images-to-sun/


Video Credit: NASA
Producer: Joy Ng (eMITS)
Scientist: Nour Rawafi (Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab)
Videographer: John Philyaw (eMITS), Lacey Young (eMITS)
Duration: 3 minutes
Release Date: July 10, 2025

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #SolarPlasma #SpaceWeather #ParkerSolarProbe #SolarSystem #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #JHUAPL #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Animation #HD #Video

Friday, May 30, 2025

NASA's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request Documents Available for Download

NASA's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request Documents Available for Download









These images show highlights from NASA's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request Summary, focusing on NASA's science budget priorities with a heliophysics (studies of the Sun) text summary below. It is important to know that NASA's total Science budget has been reduced by nearly 50%. Moreover, NASA's Office of STEM Engagement is being shut down in this budget request to "save" $143 million dollars. This will affect NASA's work in public education.

Review NASA's Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request (PDF) Documents:

Download documents for free here: 
https://www.nasa.gov/fy-2026-budget-request/

Document List (6 total) as of May 30, 2025:

Fiscal Year 2026 Discretionary Budget Request

Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Request Summary (28 pages) [Recommended reading: Source of these images]

Fiscal Year 2026 Budget Technical Supplement

Fiscal Year 2026 Agency Fact Sheet

Fiscal Year 2026 Mission Fact Sheets

NASA Heliophysics Budget Request Summary:

•$60M for Heliophysics research and analysis, to investigate the Sun and its influence on the entire solar system, studying solar processes, solar wind, magnetic fields, and interactions with Earth and other planets to understand how the Sun varies, how planetary environments respond, and how these processes affect human activities and technologies.

•$125M for the Heliophysics Explorer Program, including development of the MUSE mission, enabling competitive small and medium-class missions that complement strategic research with responsive, focused investigations.

•$55M, the highest amount ever proposed, for the Space Weather Program which plays a vital role in the national space weather enterprise by supporting space weather applied research and applications, enhancing understanding of orbital debris, advancing modeling capability to enable successful forecasting, and providing unique and useful observations to protect life on Earth and astronauts in space.

•$68M supports the Living With a Star program, including the Parker Solar Probe mission which has revolutionized our understanding of the corona and our knowledge of the origin and evolution of the solar wind; and Solar Dynamics Observatory, which gathers data to help explain the creation of solar activity, which drives space weather.

•$42M to support the IMAP and Carruthers missions, launching in FY 2026; IMAP will help researchers better understand the boundary of the heliosphere and Carruthers will study variability in Earth’s exosphere.


Credit: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
Release Date: May 30, 2025


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #NASABudgetFY2026 #NASABudget #SMD #Sun #Heliophysics #SolarSystem #Planets #Earth #Moon #ArtemisProgram #Mars #Jupiter #Europa #EuropaClipperMission #Astrobiology #HubbleSpaceTelescope #HST #RomanTelescope #WebbTelescope #JWST #STScI #Universe #UnitedStates #Infographics #STEM #Education

Monday, March 31, 2025

The Solar System from Near The Sun | NASA's Parker Solar Probe

The Solar System from Near The Sun | NASA's Parker Solar Probe

If you watch long enough, a comet will appear. Before then, you will see our Solar System from inside the orbit of Mercury as recorded by NASA's Parker Solar Probe looping around the Sun. The video captures coronal streamers into the solar wind, a small Coronal Mass Ejection (CME), and planets including, in order of appearance, Mercury, Venus, Saturn, Earth, Mars, and Jupiter. Between the emergence of Earth and Mars, Comet Tsuchinshan-ATLAS appears with a distinctive tail. The continuous fleeting streaks are high energy particles from the Sun impacting Parker's sideways looking camera. 

This time-lapse video was taken last year during Encounter 21, Parker's 21st close approach to the Sun. Studying data and images from Parker are delivering a better understanding of the dynamic Sun's effects on Earth's space weather as well as humanity's power grids, spacecraft, and space-faring astronauts.

On a mission to “touch the Sun,” NASA's Parker Solar Probe became the first spacecraft to fly through the corona—the Sun’s upper atmosphere—in 2021. With every orbit bringing it closer, the probe faces brutal heat and radiation to provide humanity with unprecedented observations, visiting the only star we can study up close.

Learn more about the Parker Solar Probe: 
https://parkersolarprobe.jhuapl.edu/

Read more about its close Sun approach: 

NASA's Parker Solar Probe Mission


Video Credit:  NASA, Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (JHUAPL), NRL, Parker Solar Probe; h/t: Richard Petarius III;
Duration: 1 minute, 19 seconds
Release Date: March 31, 2025


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #SolarWind #CME #Planets #Earth #Mercury #Venus #Mars #Saturn #Jupiter #CometTsuchinshanATLAS #SolarPlasma #SpaceWeather #ParkerSolarProbe #SolarSystem #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #JHUAPL #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Timelapse #HD #Video #APoD

Tuesday, January 21, 2025

Listen to The Sun! Transforming Heliophysics Data into Sound | NASA

Listen to The Sun! Transforming Heliophysics Data into Sound | NASA

Explore how data about the Sun from NASA's Parker Solar Probe, Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) and Wind spacecraft has been transformed into sound with NASA’s Coordinated Data Analysis Web (CDAWeb). Observe how audification can benefit heliophysics data analysis and uncover spectral features that the eyes overlook.

Heliophysics (from the prefix "helio", from Attic Greek hḗlios, meaning Sun, and the noun "physics": the science of matter and energy and their interactions) is the physics of the Sun and its connection with the Solar System. NASA defines heliophysics as "(1) the comprehensive new term for the science of the Sun—Solar System Connection, (2) the exploration, discovery, and understanding of Earth's space environment, and (3) the system science that unites all of the linked phenomena in the region of the cosmos influenced by a star like our Sun."

Sponsored by NASA's Heliophysics Digital Resource Library (HDRL) and Heliophysics Audified: Resonances in Plasmas (HARP) citizen science. 

For more information about data audification, visit:  

NASA’s CDAWeb: https://spdf.gsfc.nasa.gov/audification_readme.html

HARP Citizen Science: https://listen.spacescience.org/

00:12 Parker Solar Probe Encounters a Coronal Mass Ejection (CME)

ApJ Publication: Near-Sun In Situ and Remote-sensing Observations of a Coronal Mass Ejection and its Effect on the Heliospheric Current Sheet, O.M. Romeo et al., 2023

Data Audification: Robert Alexander

00:57 Ultra-Low Frequency Waves in Earth's Magnetosphere

 Frontiers in Astronomy and Space Sciences Publication: Listening to the Magnetosphere: How Best to Make ULF Waves Audible, M.O. Archer et al., 2022

Data Sonification: The HARP Citizen Science Project

01:24 Binaural Audification of MMS Search Coil Magnetometer Data

International Conference on Auditory Display 2024: Auralization of Magnetic Multiscale Satellite Data: Toward Integrated Audification in Space Science

Authors:
Kristina Collins
Robert L. Alexander 
Jaye Verniero 
Robert M. Candey 
Video Production:
Robert L. Alexander 
Kristina Collins 

MMS Visualization: NASA’s Scientific Visualization Studio 

Visualizer: Tom Bridgman (Global Science and Technology, Inc.)

Scientist: Tai Phan (University of California at Berkeley) 

Producer: Joy Ng (USRA)

Writer: Mara Johnson-Groh (Wyle Information Systems) 

02:40 Parker Solar Probe Crossing the Heliospheric Current Sheet (HCS)

Apj Publication: Parker Solar Probe Observations of Proton Beams Simultaneous with Ion-scale Waves,

J.L. Verniero et al., 2020 

Verniero et al. 2025 in prep 

Data Audification & Visualization: Robert Alexander 

04:07 Parker Solar Probe Captures a CME Interacting With the HCS

 Publications: 

Near-Sun In Situ and Remote-sensing Observations of a Coronal Mass Ejection and its Effect on the Heliospheric Current Sheet, O.M. Romeo et al., 2023

Parker Solar Probe Observations of Solar Wind Energetic Proton Beams Produced by Magnetic Reconnection in the Near-Sun Heliospheric Current Sheet, T.D. Phan et al., 2022 

Strong Perpendicular Velocity-space Diffusion in Proton Beams Observed by Parker Solar Probe,

J.L. Verniero et al., 2022

Verniero et al. 2025 in prep 

Data Audification: Robert Alexander 

04:43 Giant Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) Waves at the Boundary Layer of the Mother’s Day CME

GRL Publication: The Giant Kelvin-Helmholtz (KH) Waves at the Boundary Layer of the Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs) Responsible for the Largest Geomagnetic Storm in 20 Years, Katariina Nykyri, 2024 

Data Audification: Robert Alexander 

05:12 The Wind Spacecraft Encounters a Proton Cyclotron Wavestorm

ApJ Publication: A Proton-Cyclotron Wave Storm Generated by Unstable Proton Distribution Functions in the Solar Wind, R.T. Wicks, R.L. Alexander et al., 2016

Data Audification & Visualization: Robert Alexander 

 –

Video production: Robert Alexander 

Transition Audio:

Dawn Chorus Observed by the MMS Satellite Filtered OMNI Solar Wind Plasma Speed Measurements

Audified data from NASA’s CDAWeb


Video Credit: NASA
Duration: 5 minutes, 44 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 21, 2025

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #SolarPlasma #SpaceWeather #ParkerSolarProbe #NASAMMS #NASAWindSpacecraft #SolarSystem #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #JHUAPL #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Visualization #Animation #Audification #Sonification #Audio #HD #Video

Thursday, January 02, 2025

The Team That "Touched the Sun" | NASA's Parker Solar Probe Mission | JHUAPL

The Team That "Touched the Sun" NASA's Parker Solar Probe Mission | JHUAPL

"Decades of dedication. Years of innovation. One historic moment." The Parker Solar Probe’s record-breaking closest approach to the Sun on December 24, 2024, was more than just a milestone for the team who built the spacecraft. "It was the culmination of a bold vision, relentless ingenuity and dedication to advancing humanity’s understanding of our closest star."

Hear from the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) team that dared to "touch the Sun" as they reflect on the work that made the mission possible and enabled groundbreaking discoveries that will advance solar science. 

Learn more about the Parker Solar Probe: https://parkersolarprobe.jhuapl.edu/

Read more about its close Sun approach: 


Video Credit: Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (JHUAPL)
Duration: 3 minutes, 39 seconds
Release Date: Jan. 2, 2025


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #SolarPlasma #SpaceWeather #ParkerSolarProbe #SolarSystem #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #JHUAPL #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Animation #HD #Video

Friday, December 27, 2024

NASA's Parker Solar Probe: Our Closest Encounter with The Sun

NASA's Parker Solar Probe: Our Closest Encounter with The Sun

Controllers 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 430,000 miles per hour—faster than any human-made object has ever moved. A beacon tone received in the late evening hours of 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.

Read more: https://science.nasa.gov/science-research/heliophysics/nasas-parker-solar-probe-makes-history-with-closest-pass-to-sun/


Video Credit: NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)
Duration: 6 minutes
Release Date: Dec. 27, 2024


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #SolarPlasma #SpaceWeather #ParkerSolarProbe #SolarSystem #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Animation #HD #Video

NASA's Year 2025 Preview: To the Moon, Mars & Beyond

NASA's Year 2025 Preview: To the Moon, Mars & Beyond

Preparing to orbit and do science on the Moon, investigating how solar wind interacts with Mars, and demonstrating quiet supersonic flight are just a FEW of the milestones we have planned for 2025.

To learn more about the NASA missions mentioned in this highlight video, take a deep dive into these links:

[0:09] Artemis II Mission: https://www.nasa.gov/mission/artemis-ii/

[0:26] Starship Propellant Transfer Demonstration: https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/esdmd/artemis-campaign-development-division/human-landing-system-program/nasa-artemis-mission-progresses-with-spacex-starship-test-flight/

[0:35] Commercial Moon Mission - Firefly: https://science.nasa.gov/lunar-science/clps-deliveries/to19d-firefly/

[0:38] Commercial Moon Mission - Intuitive Machines-2: 

[0:43] New Astronaut Candidates Announced: https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/astronauts/astronaut-candidates/

[0:51] NASA’s Commercial Crew Program: https://www.nasa.gov/humans-in-space/commercial-space/commercial-crew-program/

[1:00] Dream Chaser First Flight / Landing: https://www.nasa.gov/missions/station/commercial-resupply/sierra-spaces-dream-chaser-new-station-resupply-spacecraft-for-nasa/

[1:09] First Flight of Low Boom Supersonic X-59: https://www.nasa.gov/mission/quesst/

[1:13] Sustainable Flight Demonstrator Update: https://www.nasa.gov/image-article/new-look-at-nasa-boeing-sustainable-experimental-airliner/

[1:17] Parker Solar Probe Closest Approach to the Sun: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/parker-solar-probe/

[1:25] NISAR Launch: https://nisar.jpl.nasa.gov/

[1:34] SPHEREx Launch: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/spherex/

[1:38] PUNCH Deployment: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/punch/

[1:42] ESCAPADE Launch to Mars: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/escapade/


Credit: NASA
Video Producer: Shane Apple
Duration: 2 minutes
Release Date: Dec. 27, 2024


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Sun #ParkerSolarProbe #Earth #Moon #Mars #ArtemisII #ArtemisProgram #ISS #CommercialCargo #DreamChaserSpacecraft #Astronauts #HumanSpaceflight #X59Aircraft #Science #SpaceTechnology #CommercialSpace #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Saturday, November 30, 2024

Supercomputer 3D Simulation of Our Sun's Turbulent Upper Layers | NASA Ames

Supercomputer 3D Simulation of Our Sun's Turbulent Upper Layers | NASA Ames

A 3D simulation showing the evolution of turbulent flows in the upper layers of the Sun. The more saturated and bright reds represent the most vigorous upward or downward twisting motions. Clear areas represent areas where there are only relatively slow up-flows, with very little twisting.

NASA supercomputers are shedding light on what causes the Sun’s most complex behaviors. Using data from the suite of active Sun-watching spacecraft currently observing the star at the heart of our solar system, researchers can explore solar dynamics like never before. This animation shows the strength of the turbulent motions of the Sun’s inner layers as materials twist into its atmosphere, resembling a roiling pot of boiling water or a flurry of schooling fish sending material bubbling up to the surface or diving it further down below. 

“Our simulations use what we call a realistic approach, which means we include as much as we know to-date about solar plasma to reproduce different phenomena observed with NASA space missions,” said Irina Kitiashvili, a scientist at NASA’s Ames Research Center in California’s Silicon Valley who helped lead the study. 

Using modern computational capabilities, the team was able for the first time to reproduce the fine structures of the subsurface layer observed with NASA’s Solar Dynamics Observatory.

“Right now, we don’t have the computational capabilities to create realistic global models of the entire Sun due to the complexity,” said Kitiashvili. “Therefore, we create models of smaller areas or layers, which can show us structures of the solar surface and atmosphere—like shockwaves or tornado-like features measuring only a few miles in size; that’s much finer detail than any one spacecraft can resolve.”

Scientists seek to better understand the Sun and what phenomena drive the patterns of its activity. The connection and interactions between the Sun and Earth drive the seasons, ocean currents, weather, climate, radiation belts, auroras and many other phenomena. Space weather predictions are critical for exploration of space, supporting the spacecraft and astronauts of NASA’s Artemis campaign. Surveying this space environment is a vital part of understanding and mitigating astronaut exposure to space radiation and keeping our spacecraft and instruments safe.

This has been a big year for our special star, studded with events like the annular eclipse, a total eclipse, and the Sun reaching its solar maximum period. In December 2024, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe mission—that is helping researchers to understand space weather right at the source—will make its closest-ever approach to the Sun and beat its own record of being the closest human-made object to reach the Sun. 

“The Sun keeps surprising us,” said Kitiashvili. “We are looking forward to seeing what kind of exciting events will be organized by the Sun.”

These simulations were run on the Pleaides supercomputer at the NASA Advanced Supercomputing facility at NASA Ames over several weeks of runtime, generating terabytes of data.

Learn more about NASA's Advanced Supercomputing (NAS) Division at the Ames Research Center: https://www.nas.nasa.gov/index.html

https://www.nas.nasa.gov/pubs/stories/2014/feature_Sun_Kitiashvili.html


3D Visualization Credit: NASA/Irina Kitiashvili and Timothy A. Sandstrom
Duration: 26 seconds
Release Date: Nov. 21, 2024

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Sun #SolarPlasma #SpaceWeather #NASASDO #ParkerSolarProbe #SolarSystem #Heliophysics #Astrophysics #NASASupercomputers #Supercomputers #SupercomputerSimulations #NASAAmes #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #Visualizations #3DSimulations #Animation #HD #Video

Saturday, November 02, 2024

What's Up for November 2024? | Skywatching Tips from NASA

What's Up for November 2024? | Skywatching Tips from NASA

Examples of skywatching highlights in the Northern Hemisphere for November 2024:

This month, catch planetary views of Saturn, Jupiter, and Mars, witness a close pass of the Parker Solar Probe by Venus, and get ready for an occultation of the bright star Spica by the Moon.

0:00 Intro

0:20 November planet highlights

1:38 Venus & Parker Solar Probe's flyby

3:03 Occultation of Spica

4:25 October photo highlights

4:38 November Moon phases


Video Credit: NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Duration: 5 minutes

Release Date: Nov. 1, 2024


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Skywatching #SUn #ParkerSolarProbe #Earth #Moon #Planets #Venus #Mars #Jupiter #Saturn #SolarSystem #Stars #Constellations #MilkyWayGalaxy #JPL #Caltech #Skywatching #UnitedStates #Canada #Mexico #NorthernHemisphere #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Friday, August 02, 2024

NEOWISE: The Legacy of NASA’s Asteroid-Hunting Telescope | NASA/JPL

NEOWISE: The Legacy of NASA’s Asteroid-Hunting Telescope | NASA/JPL

The NEOWISE mission, NASA’s asteroid-hunting space telescope, is retiring in summer 2024 after over a decade of discovering, tracking, and characterizing near-Earth objects (NEOs)—asteroids and comets that come close to Earth’s orbit. Without a propulsion system to boost its orbit, NEOWISE, short for Near-Earth Object Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, is expected to re-enter Earth’s atmosphere and burn up in the coming months. In this video, mission leaders explain how NEOWISE has vastly improved our understanding of the solar system, better prepared us to predict potential impact events, and paved the way for a new mission: NASA’s Near-Earth Object Surveyor.

Originally launched in 2009 as the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), the telescope completed its primary mission to conduct an all-sky survey in the infrared spectrum. The spacecraft detected asteroids, stars, and examples of the faintest galaxies in space. It was then put into hibernation in 2011. NASA re-awakened it in 2013, launching its second career and giving rise to its modified name, NEOWISE. On Aug. 8, 2024, mission controllers at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory will send a command to once again put the spacecraft into hibernation before its re-entry, expected in late 2024 or early 2025.

For more information on the NEOWISE mission, visit: science.nasa.gov/mission/neowise

For NEOWISE data, visit: neowise.ipac.caltech.edu


Credit: 

NASA/JPL-Caltech; WISE-NEOWISE movies compiled by Dan Caselden; WISE imagery: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA; Rho Ophiuchi cloud complex: NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA/Judy Schmidt; 10 years of NEOWISE data animation: IPAC/Caltech/University of Arizona; select asteroid animations from NASA Eyes on Asteroids; asteroid 2014 HQ124 radar imagery: NASA/JPL-Caltech/Arecibo Observatory/USRA/NSF; Orion Nebula: ESA/NASA/JPL-Caltech; International Space Station footage: NASA Johnson Space Center; comet NEOWISE images: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Naval Research Lab/Parker Solar Probe/Brendan Gallagher, and NASA/Bill Dunford

Duration: 3 minutes

Release Date: Aug. 1, 2024


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #WISE #NEOWISE #SpaceTelescope #Infrared #Stars #BlackHoles #Protostars #BrownDwarfs #Asteroids #Comets #PlanetaryDefense #SolarSystem #Cosmos #Universe #JPL #Caltech #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Wednesday, June 12, 2024

Ed Stone: Former JPL Director & Voyager Project Scientist (1936-2024) | NASA

Ed Stone: Former JPL Director & Voyager Project Scientist (1936-2024) | NASA

Ed Stone, former director of the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) and project scientist for the Voyager mission, died on June 9, 2024. A friend, mentor, and colleague to many, he was known for his straightforward leadership and commitment to communicating with the public. 

Known for his steady leadership, consensus building, and enthusiasm for engaging the public in science, Stone left a deep impact on the space community.

Edward C. Stone was preceded in death by his wife, Alice Stone, whom he met at the University of Chicago. They are survived by their two daughters, Susan and Janet Stone, and two grandsons.

Stone also served as the David Morrisroe professor of physics and vice provost for special projects at Caltech in Pasadena, California, which last year established a new faculty position, the Edward C. Stone Professorship.

Ed Stone, former director of NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and longtime project scientist of the Voyager mission, passed away on June 9, 2024. He was 88 years old.

“Ed Stone was a trailblazer who dared mighty things in space. He was a dear friend to all who knew him, and a cherished mentor to me personally,” said Nicola Fox, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Ed took humanity on a planetary tour of our solar system and beyond, sending NASA where no spacecraft had gone before. His legacy has left a tremendous and profound impact on NASA, the scientific community, and the world. My condolences to his family and everyone who loved him. Thank you, Ed, for everything.”

Stone served on nine NASA missions as either principal investigator or a science instrument lead, and on five others as a co-investigator (a key science instrument team member). These roles primarily involved studying energetic ions from the Sun and cosmic rays from the galaxy. He had the distinction of being one of the few scientists involved with both the mission that has come closest to the Sun (NASA’s Parker Solar Probe) and the one that has traveled farthest from it (Voyager).

“Ed will be remembered as an energetic leader and scientist who expanded our knowledge about the universe—from the Sun to the planets to distant stars—and sparked our collective imaginations about the mysteries and wonders of deep space,” said Laurie Leshin, JPL director and Caltech vice president. “Ed’s discoveries have fueled exploration of previously unseen corners of our solar system and will inspire future generations to reach new frontiers. He will be greatly missed and always remembered by the NASA, JPL, and Caltech communities and beyond.”

At the Helm of Voyager

Stone is best known for his work on NASA’s longest-running mission, Voyager, whose twin spacecraft launched in 1977 and are still exploring deep space today. He served as Voyager’s sole project scientist from 1972 until his retirement in 2022. Under Stone’s leadership, the mission took advantage of a celestial alignment that occurs just once every 176 years to visit Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune. During their journeys, the spacecraft revealed the first active volcanoes beyond Earth, on Jupiter’s moon Io, and an atmosphere rich with organic molecules on Saturn’s moon Titan. Voyager 2 remains the only spacecraft to fly by Uranus and Neptune, revealing Uranus’ unusual tipped magnetic poles, and the icy geysers erupting from Neptune’s moon Triton.

Now more than 15 billion miles (24 million kilometers) from Earth, Voyager 1 is the most distant human-made object. Voyager 2, traveling slightly slower and in a different direction, is more than 12 billion miles (20 billion km) from Earth. Both probes are exploring interstellar space—the region outside the heliosphere, which is a protective bubble created by the Sun’s magnetic field and the outward flow of charged particles.

“Becoming Voyager project scientist was the best decision I made in my life,” Stone said in 2018. “It opened a wonderful door of exploration.”

He was particularly proud of the way Voyager quickened the pace of scientific analysis and took advantage of opportunities to engage the public. When Voyager 1 and 2 made their close flybys of the giant planets between 1979 and 1989, Stone was overseeing 11 teams of scientists, all accustomed to releasing their results at a slower pace through peer-reviewed journals.

Stone took the lead in tailoring the peer-review process to the faster pace of the mission’s planetary encounters: In the early afternoon, after data had come down, teams of scientists would decide what they thought their best results were for the day and hold up their conclusions for feedback in front of the whole science steering group.

Based on that discussion, Stone would choose the most interesting results to present to the media and the public the next morning. The scientists would then hone their presentations that evening and even overnight — with Stone often pressing them to come up with analogies that would make the material more approachable for a lay audience—while a graphics team worked on putting together supporting images. After the news conference the following morning, the process would begin anew. This cycle could continue daily through the duration of each planetary encounter.

“It was a very exciting time, and everyone was making discoveries,” said Stamatios “Tom” Krimigis of the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, who has served as the principal investigator of Voyager’s low-energy charged particles instrument since the mission’s launch. “Ed’s approach showed us how much public interest there really was in what Voyager was doing, but it also resulted in better science. You need more than one piece of information to make a picture, and hearing about other scientists’ data helped us interpret our own.”

It was a process that continued to serve the Voyager team well in 2012 and 2013 as they debated whether or not Voyager 1 had exited the heliosphere and entered interstellar space. Some signs pointed to a new environment, but one key marker — the direction of the magnetic field lines around Voyager — hadn’t changed as significantly as scientists expected.

The team remained puzzled for months until Voyager 1’s plasma wave instrument detected a significantly denser plasma environment around the spacecraft — the result of a chance outburst of material from the Sun that set the plasma around Voyager 1 ringing like a bell. Stone gathered the team.

“Nobody could wait to get to interstellar space, but we wanted to get it right,” said Suzanne Dodd, who has served as Voyager project manager, overseeing the engineering team, at JPL since 2010. “We knew there would be people who disagreed. So Ed wanted to understand the full story and the assumptions people were making. He did a good job listening to everybody and letting them participate in the dialogue without anyone monopolizing. Then he made a decision.”

Stone realized that the scientists didn’t need to fixate on the direction of the magnetic field lines. They were a proxy for the plasma environment. The team concluded that the plasma wave science instrument’s detection provided a better analysis of the current plasma environment and was evidence of humankind’s arrival into interstellar space.

Leading JPL

Voyager’s high profile lifted Stone’s profile as well. In 1991, roughly two years after the mission completed its planetary flybys, Stone became director of JPL, serving until 2001. Under his leadership, JPL was responsible for more than two dozen missions and instruments. Highlights for Stone’s tenure included landing NASA’s Pathfinder mission with the first Mars rover, Sojourner, in 1996 and launching the NASA-ESA (European Space Agency) Cassini/Huygens mission in 1997. The first Saturn orbiter, Cassini was a direct outgrowth of the scientific questions that arose from Voyager’s two flybys, and it carried the only probe that has ever landed in the outer solar system (at Titan).

The 1990s were an era of shifting national priorities after the Cold War, with significant cuts in spending in the NASA and defense budgets. Stone restructured several missions so that they could fly under these more stringent cost constraints, including overseeing a redesign of the Spitzer Space Telescope cooling system so that it was more cost effective and could still deliver high-impact science and stunning infrared images of the universe.

Journey to Space

Edward Carroll Stone Jr. was born on Jan. 23, 1936, in Knoxville, Iowa. The eldest of two sons of Edward Carroll Stone Sr. and Ferne Elizabeth Stone, he grew up in the nearby commercial center of Burlington.

Edward Stone Sr. was a construction superintendent who delighted in showing his son how to take things apart and put them back together again — cars, radios, hi-fi stereos. When the younger Stone was in junior high, the principal asked him to learn how to operate the school’s 16 mm movie projector and soon followed up with a request to run the school’s reel-to-reel tape recorder.

“I was always interested in learning about why something is this way and not that way,” Stone said in an interview about this career in 2018. “I wanted to understand and measure and observe.”

His first job was at a J.C. Penney department store, where he worked his way up from stockroom to clerk on the store floor. He also earned money playing French horn in the Burlington Municipal Band.

After high school, Stone enrolled in Burlington Junior College to study physics, and went on to the University of Chicago for graduate school. Shortly after he was accepted, the Soviet Union launched Sputnik and the Space Age began.

“Space was a brand-new field waiting for discovery,” Stone recalled in 2018.

He joined a team at the university that was building science instruments to launch into space. The first he designed rode aboard Discoverer 36, a since-declassified spy satellite that launched in 1961 and took photographs of Earth from space as part of the Corona program. Stone’s instrument, which measured the Sun’s energetic particles, helped scientists figure out why solar radiation was fogging the film and ultimately improved their understanding of the Van Allen belts, energetic particles trapped in Earth’s magnetic field.

In 1964, Stone joined Caltech as a postdoctoral fellow, running the university’s Space Radiation Lab together with Robbie Vogt, who had been a colleague at Chicago. They worked closely on a number of NASA satellite missions, studying galactic cosmic rays and solar energetic particles. In 1972, Vogt recommended Stone to JPL leadership for the position of Voyager project scientist, which he held for 50 years.

Among Stone’s many awards, the National Medal of Science from President George H.W. Bush stands out as the most prominent. In 2019 he won the Shaw Prize in Astronomy, with an award of $1.2 million, for his leadership in the Voyager project, which, as the citation noted, “has over the past four decades, transformed our understanding of the four giant planets and the outer solar system, and has now begun to explore interstellar space.” He was also proud to have a middle school named after him in Burlington, Iowa, as an inspiration to young learners.


Credit: NASA/Jet Propulsion Laboratory-Caltech

Release Date: June 11, 2024


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #VoyagerSpacecraft #Voyager1 #Voyager2 #Planets #Mars #Jupiter #Saturn #SolarSystem #InterstellarSpace #MilkyWayGalaxy #SpaceExploration #EdStone #EdwardStone #Scientist #Explorer #Leader #JPL #Caltech #History #UnitedStates #STEM #Education

Monday, June 10, 2024

Planet Mars Auroras during Epic May 2024 Solar Storm | NASA MAVEN Mission

Planet Mars Auroras during Epic May 2024 Solar Storm | NASA MAVEN Mission

The purple color in this video shows auroras on Mars’ nightside as detected by the ultraviolet instrument aboard NASA’s MAVEN orbiter between May 14 and 20, 2024. The brighter the purple, the more auroras that were present. 

Auroras Over Mars: High above NASA's Mars Curiosity rover, NASA’s MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN) orbiter captured another effect of the recent solar activity—glowing auroras over the planet. The way these auroras occur is different than those seen on Earth.

Our home planet is shielded from charged particles by a robust magnetic field. It normally limits auroras to regions near the poles. (Solar maximum is the reason behind the recent auroras seen as far south as Alabama.) Mars lost its internally generated magnetic field in the ancient past, so there is no protection from the barrage of energetic particles. When charged particles hit the Martian atmosphere, it results in auroras that engulf the entire planet.

During solar events, the Sun releases a wide range of energetic particles. Only the most energetic can reach the surface to be measured by RAD. Slightly less energetic particles, those that cause auroras, are sensed by MAVEN’s Solar Energetic Particle instrument.

Scientists can use that instrument’s data to rebuild a timeline of each minute as the solar particles screamed past, meticulously teasing apart how the event evolved.

“This was the largest solar energetic particle event that MAVEN has ever seen,” said MAVEN Space Weather Lead, Christina Lee of the University of California, Berkeley’s Space Sciences Laboratory. “There have been several solar events in past weeks, so we were seeing wave after wave of particles hitting Mars.”

The data coming in from NASA’s spacecraft won’t only help future planetary missions to the Red Planet. It is contributing to a wealth of information being gathered by the agency’s other heliophysics missions, including Voyager, Parker Solar Probe, and the forthcoming ESCAPADE (Escape and Plasma Acceleration and Dynamics Explorers) mission.

Targeting a late-2024 launch, ESCAPADE’s twin small satellites will orbit Mars and observe space weather from a unique dual perspective that is more detailed than what MAVEN can currently measure alone.

More About the Missions
MAVEN’s principal investigator is based at the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado Boulder. LASP is also responsible for managing science operations and public outreach and communications. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the MAVEN mission. Lockheed Martin Space built the spacecraft and is responsible for mission operations. NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Southern California provides navigation and Deep Space Network support. The MAVEN team is preparing to celebrate the spacecraft’s 10th year at Mars in September 2024.

Similarly, the star camera NASA’s 2001 Mars Odyssey orbiter uses for orientation was inundated with energy from solar particles, momentarily going out. (Odyssey has other ways to orient itself, and recovered the camera within an hour.) Even with the brief lapse in its star camera, the orbiter collected vital data on X-rays, gamma rays, and charged particles using its High-Energy Neutron Detector.

This was not Odyssey’s first brush with a solar flare. In 2003, solar particles from a solar flare that was ultimately estimated to be an X45 fried Odyssey’s radiation detector. Ironically, it was designed to measure such events.

NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the MAVEN mission.

For more information on MAVEN, go to: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/maven/

Video Credit: NASA/University of Colorado/LASP
Duration: 17 seconds
Release Date: June 10, 2024

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Star #Sun #SolarMax #Planet #Mars #Atmosphere #Ultraviolet #Auroras #UV #Radiation #Astronauts #MAVENMission #MAVENSpacecraft #SolarSystem #SpaceExploration #GSFC #LASP #CUBoulder #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Friday, March 29, 2024

"Celebrating the Legacy of The US Delta Rocket Program" | United Launch Alliance

"Celebrating the Legacy of The US Delta Rocket Program" | United Launch Alliance

"Following more than 60 years of lifting historic missions to space and becoming a pillar in American rocketry, the Delta program is coming to a close with its final launch. Here is a look back at examples of its groundbreaking firsts and iconic missions launched on Delta rockets."

"Delta quickly established its record of excellence in the 1960s launching Ekko—the world's first communication satellite, Tyros, the first space-based weather observatory, and NASA's Pioneer and Explorer scientific spacecraft."

"The introduction of the Delta 2 rocket on Valentine's Day 1989 ushered in the GPS era—a capability that improves life on Earth every day from navigation to banking, agriculture and beyond. The Beloved Delta 2 earned its place in history with 155 flights with eight of those missions to Mars for NASA including the Spirit and Opportunity rovers."

"The Delta program's commitment to vehicle improvement to meet customer needs culminated in the Delta 4 family of launch vehicles with a wide range of increased capabilities delivering missions for the space force, the national reconnaissance office, NASA, and commercial clients."

"Every Delta 4 launch has been successful as America's trusted heavy lifter. The triple barrel Delta 4 heavy launched NASA's first Orion spacecraft on an uncrewed Moon mission and sent NASA's Parker Solar Probe to surf the atmosphere of our Sun." 

"The 16th and final flight of the Delta 4 heavy rocket carries the National Reconnaissance Office's NROL70, capping off the incredible legacy of this program."

Learn more about the United Launch Alliance Delta 4 heavy rocket: 

Video Credit: United Launch Alliance (ULA)
Duration: 1 minute, 51 seconds
Release Date: March 28, 2024

#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Earth #Moon #Mars #Sun #ULA #DeltaIVRocket #Satellites #PioneerSpacecraft #ExplorerSpacecraft #NASAOrion #ArtemisProgram #MarsOpportunityRover #MarsSpiritRover #KSC #JPL #GSFC #SpaceExploration #SolarSystem #USAF #GPS #NROL #UnitedStates #History #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Tuesday, January 02, 2024

Sunrise over Earth | International Space Station

Sunrise over Earth | International Space Station


As the International Space Station orbited over the southern Indian Ocean, an astronaut looked eastward and captured this photo of the Sun rising above Earth’s horizon.

This edge-on photo of Earth’s limb reveals several atmospheric layers. The lowest layer, known as the troposphere, appears orange and red as these wavelengths of light are scattered by particles of dust, smoke, and smog. Directly above the troposphere is the stratosphere. This blue layer is usually cloud-free and extends as much as 50 kilometers (30 miles) above Earth’s surface. The region directly above the stratosphere is known as the mesosphere.

The Sun—the focal point in this image—is front and center in NASA’s Heliophysics Big Year. This “big year” celebration began with the annular solar eclipse in October 2023 and continues with a total solar eclipse in April 2024. It concludes with the Parker Solar Probe’s closest approach to the Sun in December 2024.

The total solar eclipse in April 2024 will pass over Mexico, the United States, and Canada. In addition to putting on an impressive show, the eclipse offers research opportunities including the chance for scientists to study the Sun’s effect on Earth’s ionosphere. This is the region spanning from about 80–600 kilometers (50–400 miles) above Earth’s surface, overlapping with the top of the atmosphere and the beginning of space. It is where the space station and other satellites in low Earth orbit hang out, and where radio and GPS signals bounce around.

During a solar eclipse, astronauts on the space station can sometimes see the Moon’s shadow passing over Earth. Views of sunrises are much more common with astronauts witnessing as many as 16 sunrises every 24 hours.

Astronaut photograph ISS070-E-1178 was acquired on September 29, 2023, with a Nikon D5 digital camera using a focal length of 170 millimeters. The image was provided by the ISS Crew Earth Observations Facility and the Earth Science and Remote Sensing Unit at Johnson Space Center. The image was taken by a member of the Expedition 70 crew. It has been cropped and enhanced to improve contrast, and lens artifacts have been removed.


Image Credit: NASA/JSC Gateway to Astronaut Photography of Earth

Image Date: Sept. 29, 2023

Caption Credit: Kathryn Hansen

Release Date: Jan. 1, 2024


#NASA #Space #Science #ISS #Planet #Earth #Sun #Sunrise #OrbitalSunrise #Atmosphere #IndiaOcean #Astronauts #Cosmonauts #HumanSpaceflight #SpaceTechnology #UnitedStates #Russia #Роскосмос #JAXA #Japan #SpaceResearch #SpaceLaboratory #OverviewEffect #OrbitalPerspective #Expedition70 #InternationalCooperation #STEM #Education

Friday, July 07, 2023

The Webb Telescope Finds Distant Black Hole in Early Universe | This Week @NASA

The Webb Telescope Finds Distant Black Hole in Early Universe | This Week @NASA 

What the James Webb Space Telescope found way back in the early Universe, another hot trip around the Sun for our Parker Solar Probe, and we are back in touch with our helicopter on Mars . . . a few of the stories to tell you about—This Week at NASA!


Credit: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)

Video Producer, Editor, & Narrator: Andre Valentine

Duration: 2 minutes, 28 seconds

Release Date: July 7, 2023


#NASA #ESA #Astronomy #Space #Earth #Sun #ParkerSolarProbe #Mars #IngenuityHelicopter #Hubble #JWST #Stars #CEERSSurvey #Galaxies #Galaxy #CEERS1019 #BlackHoles #Astrophysics #Universe #SpaceTelescopes #GSFC #STScI #UnitedStates #CSA #Canada #Europe #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Monday, March 20, 2023

NASA's Parker Solar Probe Observes Sun Alongside Dozens of Observatories | JHUAPL

NASA's Parker Solar Probe Observes Sun Alongside Dozens of Observatories

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe completed its 15th close approach to the Sun on March 17, coming within 5.3 million miles of the scorching solar surface. The geometry of Parker’s latest orbit also placed it in direct view of Earth and several other Sun-observing spacecraft during its close encounter, providing unique scientific opportunities for collaborative observations from the ground and space. 

Parker Solar Probe Mission Information:

https://jhuapl.link/psp-wzk

Parker Solar Probe is humanity’s first mission to the sun. It orbits directly through the solar atmosphere–the corona–closer to the surface than any human-made object has ever gone. While facing brutal heat and radiation, the mission will reveal fundamental science behind what drives the solar wind, the constant outpouring of material from the sun that shapes planetary atmospheres and affects space weather near Earth.

Parker Solar Probe is part of NASA’s Living With a Star Program to explore aspects of the connected sun-Earth system that directly affect life and society.

Credit: Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory (APL)/Mike Yakovlev

Duration: 1 minute

Release Date: March 20, 2023


#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Earth #SpaceWeather #Star #Sun #SolarCorona #Astrophysics #Heliophysics #ParkerSolarProbeMission #Spacecraft #SolarProbe #EugeneParker #Astrophysicist #JHUAPL #GSFC #UnitedStates #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Sunday, January 01, 2023

NASA's Parker Solar Probe Completes 14th Close Encounter with The Sun

NASA's Parker Solar Probe Completes 14th Close Encounter with The Sun

On Dec. 6, 2022, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe began the 14th of 24 planned close approaches to the Sun. The closest approach—called perihelion— occurred on Dec. 11, 2022, at 8:16 a.m. EST, during which the spacecraft traveled at 364,639 miles per hour—fast enough to fly from New York to Tokyo in just over a minute. 

During the encounter, which ends Dec. 16, 2022, the European Space Agency’s Solar Orbiter, NASA’s Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory-A (STEREO-A), and radar telescopes on Earth will view the Sun from the same angle as Parker at the beginning of the encounter. They will slowly progress to an approximately 90-degree angle from Parker on the inbound side of the encounter. 

The European Space Agency’s BepiColombo mission will start out viewing the Sun from the same angle as Parker and progress to observing the Sun from an approximately 90-degree angle from Parker on the outbound side of the encounter. This orientation could provide an opportunity to observe a solar event from all sides. 

Parker Solar Probe Mission Information:

Learn more: https://jhuapl.link/psp-wzk

Parker Solar Probe is humanity’s first mission to the sun. After launch, it will orbit directly through the solar atmosphere–the corona–closer to the surface than any human-made object has ever gone. While facing brutal heat and radiation, the mission will reveal fundamental science behind what drives the solar wind, the constant outpouring of material from the sun that shapes planetary atmospheres and affects space weather near Earth.

Parker Solar Probe is part of NASA’s Living With a Star Program to explore aspects of the connected sun-Earth system that directly affect life and society.


Video Credit: Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Lab (APL)

Duration: 1 minute, 15 seconds

Release Date: Dec. 15, 2022

#NASA #Astronomy #Space #Science #Earth #SpaceWeather #Sun #SolarCorona #Star #Astrophysics #ParkerSolarProbeMission #ESA #BepiColombo #Spacecraft #SolarProbe #EugeneParker #Astrophysicist #JHUAPL #GSFC #UnitedStates #Europe #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Monday, October 10, 2022

China Launches Solar Observatory ASO-S to Unravel the Sun's Secrets

China Launches New Solar Observatory ASO-S to Unravel the Sun's Secrets

A Long March-2D rocket launched the Advanced Space-based Solar Observatory (ASO-S), nicknamed, Kuafu-1, from the Jiuquan Satellite Launch Center in Gansu Province, China, on October 8, 2022, at 23:43 UTC (9 October, at 07:43 local time). It has successfully entered its planned orbit. The Advanced Space-based Solar Observatory (ASO-S) will “conduct observations on the solar magnetic field, solar flares and coronal mass ejections, to support the forecasting of catastrophic space weather.”

The probe, nicknamed Kuafu-1, will operate in an orbit 720 kilometers from Earth, permanently facing the sun. It has been described by its principal scientist, Gan Weiqun, as the world's first near-Earth satellite telescope to simultaneously monitor solar flares, coronal mass ejections (CMEs) and the sun's magnetic field. It can directly "look" at the sun, observing the sun by means of telemetry and remote sensing, and thus image it, Gan explained. It complements NASA's Parker Solar Probe launched in 2018. Parker is located very close to the sun and cannot perform direct imaging.

In 2021, China also launched an experimental solar satellite called Xihe. It operates in a sun-synchronous orbit at an average altitude of 517 kilometers with a solar Hα (H-alpha) imaging spectrometer as its main scientific payload.


All of the probe data will be freely available to scientists around the world after the ASO-S is commissioned, according to principal scientist, Gan Weiqun.


Credit:  GLOBALink 

Duration: 1 minute

Release Date: October 9, 2022


#NASA #Space #Astronomy #Science #Earth #Sun #Star #China #中国 #ASOS #先进天基太阳天文台 #Kuafu1 #Spacecraft #Probe #SolarObservatory #Satellite #Telescope #SpaceWeather #SolarFlares #CoronalMassEjections #MagneticField #Heliophysics #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Friday, February 11, 2022

Fine-Tuning the James Webb Space Telescope | This Week @NASA

Fine-Tuning the James Webb Space Telescope | This Week @NASA

February 11, 2022: Fine-tuning the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), a different view of Venus, and the science on an upcoming space station resupply mission . . . a few of the stories to tell you about – This Week at NASA!

Learn more about JWST: https://www.jwst.nasa.gov

0:00 Introduction

0:13 Aligning the James Webb Space Telescope

1:02 Parker Solar Probe’s First Visible Light Images of Venus’ Surface

1:34 Upcoming Commercial Resupply Mission to the Space Station

2:13 Airborne Science Mission Studying Snowstorms

2:45 RS-25 Engine Test Series Continues

Producer: Andre Valentine

Editor: Sonnet Apple

Music: Universal Production Music


Credit: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) 

Duration: 3 minutes, 43 seconds

Release Date: February 11, 2022

#NASA #Hubble #Astronomy #Space #Science #JamesWebb #Webb #JWST #Venus #SolarSystem #Exploration #Parker #ISS #Cosmos #Universe #Telescope #ESA #Europe #CSA #Canada #Goddard #GSFC #STScI #STEM #Education #HD #Video

Wednesday, February 09, 2022

New Views of Venus’ Surface | NASA’s Parker Solar Probe

New Views of Venus’ Surface | NASA’s Parker Solar Probe


NASA’s Parker Solar Probe has taken its first visible light images of the surface of Venus from space. Smothered in thick clouds, Venus’ surface is usually shrouded from sight. However, in two recent flybys of the planet, Parker used its Wide-Field Imager (WISPR) to image the entire nightside in wavelengths of the visible spectrum—the type of light that the human eye can seeand extending into the near-infrared.

The images, combined into a video, reveal a faint glow from the surface that shows distinctive features like continental regions, plains, and plateaus. A luminescent halo of oxygen in the atmosphere can also be seen surrounding the planet.

More information: 

https://www.nasa.gov/feature/goddard/2022/sun/parker-solar-probe-captures-its-first-images-of-venus-surface-in-visible-light-confirmed

Link to paper: https://agupubs.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1029/2021GL096302

Mission Information:

Parker Solar Probe is humanity’s first mission to the sun. After launch, it will orbit directly through the solar atmosphere–the corona–closer to the surface than any human-made object has ever gone. While facing brutal heat and radiation, the mission will reveal fundamental science behind what drives the solar wind, the constant outpouring of material from the sun that shapes planetary atmospheres and affects space weather near Earth.

Parker Solar Probe is part of NASA’s Living With a Star Program to explore aspects of the connected sun-Earth system that directly affect life and society.

Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC)

Scientists:

Brian Wood (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)

Giada Arney (NASA/GSFC)

Brendan Gallagher (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)

Phillip Hess (U.S. Naval Research Laboratory)

Angelos Vourlidas (Johns Hopkins University/APL)

Producer: Joy Ng (KBRwyle)

Writer: Mara Johnson-Groh (Wyle Information Systems)

Animator: Steve Gribben (Johns Hopkins APL)

Music credits: “Tides” and “Subsurface” by Ben Niblett [PRS] and Jon Cotton [PRS] from Universal Production Music

Duration: 3 minutes, 24 seconds

Release Date: February 9, 2022

#NASA #Astronomy #Science #Space #Venus #Planet #Atmosphere #SpaceWeather #Sun #Solar #Star #Astrophysics #Spacecraft #SolarProbe #Parker #EugeneParker #JHUAPL #Goddard #UnitedStates #Mission #STEM #Education #Video #HD