NASA Launches IBEX Mission To Outer Solar System

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Oct. 19, 2008

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
321-867-2468 
george.h.diller@nasa.gov  

Dwayne Brown
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726
dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov 

Nancy Neal Jones
Goddard Space Flight Center, Md. 
301-286-0039
nancy.n.jones@nasa.gov 

RELEASE: 08-262

NASA LAUNCHES IBEX MISSION TO OUTER SOLAR SYSTEM

GREENBELT, Md. -- NASA's Interstellar Boundary Explorer mission, or 
IBEX, successfully launched from the Kwajalein Atoll in the Pacific 
Ocean at 1:47 p.m. EDT, Sunday. IBEX will be the first spacecraft to 
image and map dynamic interactions taking place in the outer solar 
system. 

The spacecraft separated from the third stage of its Pegasus launch 
vehicle at 1:53 p.m. and immediately began powering up components 
necessary to control onboard systems. The operations team is 
continuing to check out spacecraft subsystems. 

"After a 45-day orbit-raising and spacecraft-checkout period, the 
spacecraft will start its exciting science mission," said IBEX 
mission manager Greg Frazier of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in 
Greenbelt, Md.

Just as an impressionist artist makes an image from countless tiny 
strokes of paint, IBEX will build an image of the outer boundary of 
the solar system from impacts on the spacecraft by high-speed 
particles called energetic neutral atoms. These particles are created 
in the boundary region when the 1-million mph solar wind blows out in 
all directions from the sun and plows into the gas of interstellar 
space. This region is important to study because it shields many of 
the dangerous cosmic rays that would flood the space around Earth.

"No one has seen an image of the interaction at the edge of our solar 
system where the solar wind collides with interstellar space," said 
IBEX Principal Investigator David McComas of the Southwest Research 
Institute in San Antonio. "We know we're going to be surprised. It's 
a little like getting the first weather satellite images. Prior to 
that, you had to infer the global weather patterns from a limited 
number of local weather stations. But with the weather satellite 
images, you could see the hurricanes forming and the fronts 
developing and moving across the country."

IBEX is the latest in NASA's series of low-cost, rapidly developed 
Small Explorers spacecraft. The Southwest Research Institute 
developed the IBEX mission with a team of national and international 
partners. Goddard manages the Explorers Program for the Science 
Mission Directorate in Washington.

For more information about the IBEX mission, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/ibex 

	
-end-



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