NASA Renames Radiation Belt Mission to Honor Pioneering Scientist

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Nov. 9, 2012

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

Geoff Brown 
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, Laurel, Md. 
240-228-5618/443-778-5618 
geoffrey.brown@xxxxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 12-392

NASA RENAMES RADIATION BELT MISSION TO HONOR PIONEERING SCIENTIST

WASHINGTON -- NASA has renamed a recently launched mission that 
studies Earth's radiation belts as the Van Allen Probes in honor of 
the late James Van Allen. Van Allen was the head of the physics 
department at the University of Iowa who discovered the radiation 
belts encircling Earth in 1958. 

The new name of the mission, previously called the Radiation Belt 
Storm Probes (RBSP), was announced Friday during a ceremony at the 
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, 
Md. 

"James Van Allen was a true pioneer in astrophysics," said John 
Grunsfeld, astronaut and associate administrator for NASA's Science 
Mission Directorate at the agency's headquarters in Washington. "His 
ground breaking research paved the way for current and future space 
exploration. These spacecraft now not only honor his iconic name but 
his mark on science." 

During his career, Van Allen was the principal investigator for 
scientific investigations on 24 Earth satellites and planetary 
missions, beginning with the first successful American satellite, 
Explorer I, and continuing with Pioneer 10 and Pioneer 11. He also 
helped develop the first plans for an International Geophysical Year 
was held in 1957. Van Allen, who worked at APL during and after World 
War II, also is credited with discovery of a new moon of Saturn in 
1979, as well as radiation belts around that planet. 

Launched Aug. 30 from Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida, the 
Van Allen Probes comprise the first dual-spacecraft mission 
specifically created to investigate the radiation belts that surround 
Earth. These two belts encircle the planet and are filled with highly 
charged particles. 

The belts are affected by solar storms and coronal mass ejections and 
sometimes swell dramatically. When this occurs, they can pose dangers 
to communications, GPS satellites and human spaceflight activities. 

"After only two months in orbit, the Van Allen Probes have made 
significant contributions to our understanding of the radiation 
belts," says APL Director Ralph Semmel. "The science and data from 
these amazing twin spacecraft will allow for more effective and safe 
space technologies in the decades to come. APL is proud to have built 
and to operate this new resource for NASA and our nation, and we are 
proud to have the mission named for one of APL's original staff." 

Operators have powered up all flight systems and science instruments 
on the probes. Data about the particles that swirl through the belts, 
and the fields and waves that transport them, are being gathered by 
five instrument groups designed and operated by teams at the New 
Jersey Institute of Technology in Newark; University of Iowa in Iowa 
City; University of Minnesota in Minneapolis; University of New 
Hampshire in Durham; and the National Reconnaissance Office in 
Chantilly, Va. 

The probes will spend two years looping through every part of both Van 
Allen belts. By having two spacecraft in different regions of the 
belts at the same time, scientists finally will be able to gather 
data from within the belts themselves, learning how they change over 
space and time. In addition, a space weather broadcast will transmit 
selected data from those instruments around the clock, giving 
researchers a check on current conditions near Earth. 

The Van Allen Probes comprise the second mission in NASA's Living With 
a Star program to explore aspects of the connected sun-Earth system 
that directly affect life and society. The program is managed by 
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. 

For more information about NASA's Van Allen Probes mission, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/vanallenprobes 

	
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