Iran Daily

Design call for ‘solar sentinel’ mission

-

UK scientists and engineers will play a leading role in developing a satellite that can warn if Earth is about to be hit by damaging solar storms.

The European Space Agency (ESA) has requested studies be undertaken to design the mission that would launch in the 2020s, BBC reported.

Explosive eruptions from the Sun can lead to widespread disruption on our planet — degrading communicat­ions, even knocking over power grids.

The satellite’s observatio­ns would increase the time available to prepare.

ESA has a working name for the new mission — ‘Lagrange’, which reàects the position the satellite would take up in space.

The plan is to go to a gravitatio­nal ‘sweetspot’ just behind the Earth in its orbit around the Sun known as ‘Lagrangian Point ¿ve’.

Spacecraft that are sited there do not have to use so much fuel to maintain station — but there is an even bigger operationa­l rationale to use this location: It is the perfect spot to see that part of the Sun which is about to rotate into view of the Earth.

British solar physicist Prof. Richard Harrison, explained, “So, not only do you get a preview of the active regions and how complicate­d they are, but if the Sun throws something out you also get to track it from the side.

“Imagine a ¿st coming directly at your face — it’s dif¿cult to say how far away it is; but if you see that ¿st from the side, it’s much easier.”

ESA signed four so-called Phase AB1 contracts on Friday at its mission control center in Darmstadt, Germany.

These include two parallel industrial studies — to be led by Airbus UK and OHB System of Germany — to spec the spacecraft bus, or chassis, and the process for integratin­g all the satellite’s instrument­s.

The aerospace companies will also work out how the entire mission would be managed, from launch to the end of service life.

The actual design of the onboard instrument­s is the subject of the other two contracts. Both of these will be directed by British-led consortia.

RAL (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory) Space will assess the requiremen­ts of the mission’s ‘remote sensing package’ — that is, the instrument­s that discern what the Sun is doing by looking at it.

The UK’S Mullard Space Science Laboratory (MSSL) will scope the ‘in-situ package’ — those instrument­s that investigat­e the Sun’s activity by directly sensing emitted particles and magnetic ¿elds.

Although led from Britain, these efforts will of course draw on talents from across European member states.

● These are the sweetspots in the Sunearth-moon system

● They are places where gravitatio­nal forces balance out

● Satellites at these locations use less fuel to maintain station

● L5 is at a 60-degree offset, and follows Earth in its orbit

● A complement­ary US mission would very likely go to L1

Solar storms are a common occurrence. Our star will sometimes despatch big bursts of shortwave and longwave radiation, superfast particles and colossal volumes of charged gas (plasma) in our direction. This material is also threaded with strong magnetic ¿elds.

When these emissions encounter Earth, they can kick-off a number of effects in modern infrastruc­ture, from glitching electronic­s in aircraft avionics and in orbiting spacecraft to increasing the interferen­ce heard on radio broadcasts.

Numerous studies have warned of the possible consequenc­es of a major solar storm impacting Earth.

Just last year, a government report said the UK economy would lose £1 billion for every day the GPS satellite-navigation service was unavailabl­e.

Dr. Ralph Cordey from Airbus UK, said, “What we need is a ‘solar sentinel’, watching the Sun to tell us what is going to happen in advance.

“This is an area where the UK’S expertise is well establishe­d. It’s also the case that the impacts of ‘space weather’ are regarded as a priority in the UK with the issue recognized in the register of civil hazards, along with pandemic Àu, severe Àooding and volcanic eruptions.”

The Lagrange mission concept is being overseen by the Space Situationa­l Awareness programmer at ESA to which the UK committed €22 million, over four years, at the last gathering of Europe’s space ministers in December 2016.

When the ministers next meet, in December 2019, they will have the results of the new studies and should hopefully be in a position then to sanction the mission’s full developmen­t.

One key instrument that will have to be carried is a coronagrap­h.

This is a device that blocks the full glare of the Sun’s disc so that the beginnings of an eruption are more easily seen.

At the moment, space weather forecaster­s are relying on a coronagrap­h on a 20-year-old spacecraft called Soho.

Harrison, who is the chief scientist at RAL Space, said, “A coronagrap­h gives us the ¿rst warning that something really is happening.

“A coronal mass ejection is a million times weaker in intensity than the Sun itself. It’s a contrast problem: if you didn’t block off the Sun, you wouldn’t see it.”

It is likely the Americans will launch a similar mission in the coming years that will sit directly in front of Earth in line with the Sun.

Taking the two perspectiv­es together will give solar storm forecaster­s the best assessment of potential impacts.

 ??  ?? A coronagrap­h blocks out the Sun’s disc to highlight fainter emission. BBC
A coronagrap­h blocks out the Sun’s disc to highlight fainter emission. BBC

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Iran