THEMIS Mission to Provide New Understanding of Substorm Life Cycle

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Jan. 17, 2007

Dwayne Brown/Tabatha Thompson
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-1726/3895

Cynthia O'Carroll
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
301-286-4647 

RELEASE: 07-011

THEMIS MISSION TO PROVIDE NEW UNDERSTANDING OF SUBSTORM LIFE CYCLE

WASHINGTON - NASA's THEMIS, the Time History of Events and Macroscale 
Interactions during Substorms mission, is set to venture into space 
and help resolve the mystery of what triggers geomagnetic substorms. 
For the first time, scientists will get a comprehensive view of the 
substorm phenomena from Earth's upper atmosphere to far into space, 
pinpointing where and when each substorm begins. 

Substorms are atmospheric events visible in the northern hemisphere as 
a sudden brightening of the Northern Lights. THEMIS also will provide 
clues about the role of substorms in severe space weather and 
identify where and when substorms begin.

THEMIS' five identical probes will be the largest number of scientific 
satellites NASA has ever launched into orbit aboard a single rocket. 
This unique constellation of satellites will line up along the 
sun-Earth line, collect coordinated measurements every four days, and 
be ready to observe more than 30 substorms during the two-year 
mission. Data collected from the five probes will pinpoint where and 
when substorms begin, a feat impossible with any previous 
single-satellite mission.

"For more than 30 years the source location of these explosive energy 
releases has been sought after with great fervor. It is a question 
almost as old as space physics itself," said Vassilis Angelopoulos, 
THEMIS' principal investigator at the University of California, 
Berkeley's Space Sciences Laboratory. "A substorm starts from a 
single point in space and progresses past the moon's orbit within 
minutes, so a single satellite cannot identify the substorm origin. 
The five-satellite constellation of THEMIS will finally identify the 
trigger location and the physics involved in substorms."

Researchers have long known that the sudden brightening of the Aurora 
Borealis, or Northern Lights, is generated when showers of high-speed 
electrons descend along the magnetic field lines to strike Earth's 
upper atmosphere. These lights are the visible manifestations of 
invisible energy releases, called geomagnetic substorms.

Scientists want to learn when, where, and why solar wind energy stored 
within Earth's magnetosphere is explosively released to accelerate 
electrons into the Earth's upper atmosphere. To find the answer, the 
five THEMIS probes will magnetically map the North American continent 
every four days for approximately 15 hours. At the same time, 20 
ground stations in Alaska and Canada with automated, all-sky cameras 
and magnetometers will document the auroras and space currents from 
Earth.

"Many of NASA's future science missions will be constellations of 
satellites that will provide simultaneous, three-dimensional views of 
nature. THEMIS will give us a deeper understanding of the impact of 
the solar wind on the Earth and provide vital data for our manned 
explorations as they travel to the moon and beyond," said Frank Snow, 
THEMIS project manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, 
Greenbelt, Md.

THEMIS is set to launch in mid-February aboard a Delta II rocket from 
Launch Complex 17-B at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Fla. For 
launch information, news media should contact George Diller, Kennedy 
Space Center, Fla., public affairs, at 321-867-2468 or Robert 
Sanders, University of California, Berkeley, at 510-643-6998. 

THEMIS is the fifth medium-class mission under NASA's Explorer 
Program, which provides frequent flight opportunities for world-class 
scientific investigations from space within the heliophysics and 
astrophysics science areas. 

The Explorer Program Office at Goddard manages the NASA-funded THEMIS 
mission. The University of California, Berkeley's Space Sciences 
Laboratory is responsible for project management, science and 
ground-based instruments, mission integration and post launch 
operations. Swales Aerospace, Beltsville, Md., built the THEMIS 
probes.

For more information about the THEMIS mission and imagery, visit: 

www.nasa.gov/themis

	
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