ROCKET HURTLES TOWARDS THE SUN
EMBARKING on a mission that scientists have been dreaming of since the Sputnik era, a NASA spacecraft on Sunday hurtled toward the sun on a quest to unlock some of its mysteries by getting closer than any object sent before.
If all goes well, the Parker Solar Probe will fly straight through the wispy edges of the sun’s corona, or outer atmosphere, in November.
In the years ahead, it will gradually get within six million kilometres of the surface, its instruments protected from the extreme heat and radiation by a revolutionary new carbon heat shield and other hi-tech wizardry. Altogether, the Parker probe will make 24 close approaches to our star during the sevenyear, $1.5 billion journey.
“Wow, here we go. We’re in for some learning over the next several years,” said Eugene Parker, the 91-year-old astrophysicist for whom the spacecraft is named. It was Parker who accurately theorised 60 years ago the existence of solar wind – the supersonic stream of charged particles blasting off the sun and coursing through space, sometimes wreaking havoc on electrical systems on Earth.
This is the first time NASA has named a spacecraft after a living person. As Parker and thousands of others watched, a Delta IV Heavy rocket carried the probe aloft, thundering into the clear, star-studded sky on three pillars of fire that lit up the mid-night darkness.
NASA needed the mighty 23-storey rocket, plus a third stage, to get the Parker probe – the size of a small car – racing toward the sun, 150 million kilometres from Earth.