NASA and ESA Select Science Investigations for Solar Orbiter

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March 20, 2009

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

Monica Talevi 
European Space Agency, Noordwijk, The Netherlands 
31-71-565-3223 
monica.talevi@xxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 09-066

NASA AND ESA SELECT SCIENCE INVESTIGATIONS FOR SOLAR ORBITER

WASHINGTON -- NASA and the European Space Agency have selected 10 
proposals for science instruments to fly aboard a spacecraft that 
will study the sun from a unique vantage point in space. 

The European-led mission, called the Solar Orbiter, will be positioned 
about one-fourth the distance Earth is from the sun. The location 
ultimately will enhance the ability for scientists worldwide to 
forecast space weather. 

Space weather can produce electromagnetic fields on Earth that induce 
extreme currents in wires, disrupting power lines, causing 
wide-spread blackouts and affecting communication cables that support 
the Internet. Severe space weather also produces energetic solar 
particles and the dislocation of Earth's radiation belts, which can 
damage satellites used for commercial communications, global 
positioning and weather forecasting. Additionally, space weather 
poses risks to astronauts. 

"These selections provide the highest scientific value to help answer 
questions about our life giving star, the sun," said Dick Fisher, 
director for NASA's Heliophysics Division in Washington. "This 
collaboration will create a new chapter in heliophysics research and 
provide a strong partnership with the international science community 
to complement future robotic and human exploration activities." 

The continued development of the selected investigations beyond 
initial design of the instruments, known as Phase A, will depend on 
technical feasibility, cost and schedule commitments from the 
principal investigators. Continuation also will depend on available 
NASA program funds and ESA's Cosmic Vision mission down-selection 
process to be completed in early 2010. 

"The announcement of the preliminary payload selection for Solar 
Orbiter is a positive step toward the realization of a joint mission 
aimed at collecting unprecedented data about our star," said Marcello 
Coradini, ESA coordinator for solar system missions in Paris. "We are 
delighted to continue our tradition of partnership with NASA, which 
already has enabled us to carry out extraordinary scientific 
missions." 

Of the 10 selected instrument proposals, three will receive NASA 
funding: 



Solar Orbiter Heliospheric Imager; Russell Howard, principal 
investigator, Naval Research Laboratory in Washington. This 
instrument will provide revolutionary measurements to pinpoint 
coronal mass ejections or CMEs. CME's are violent eruptions with 
masses greater than a few billion tons. They travel from 60 to more 
than 2,000 miles per second. They have been compared to hurricanes 
because of the widespread disruption of communications and power 
systems they can cause when directed at Earth. 




Spectral Imaging of the Coronal Environment; Donald Hassler, principal 
investigator, Southwest Research Institute in Boulder, Colo. This 
instrument will provide an extreme ultraviolet spectrometer or 
optical instrument that will measure different wavelengths of light 
emitted from the sun. Data will advance our knowledge of the sun's 
dynamics to better understand the effects on Earth and the solar 
system. 




Suprathermal Ion Spectrograph; lead co-investigator Glenn Mason, 
Applied Physics Laboratory in Columbia, Md. This experiment will 
measure energetic particles ejected from the sun. Data will be 
compared to other solar and interplanetary processes to understand 
solar system space weather. Understanding the connections between the 
sun and its planets will allow better prediction of the impacts of 
solar activity on humans, technological systems and even the presence 
of life itself in the universe. 


The investigations are part of NASA's Living with a Star Program. The 
program is designed to understand how and why the sun varies, how 
planetary systems respond and the effect on human space and Earth 
activities. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., 
manages the program for the agency's Heliophysics Division of the 
Science Mission Directorate. 

For more information about the Solar Orbiter program, visit: 



http://sci.esa.int/solarorbiter 


For more information about the Living with a Star Program, visit: 



http://lws.gsfc.nasa.gov 

	
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