Arab Times

NASA’s craft first to ‘touch the Sun’

Red-hot voyage to sun will bring us closer to our star

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CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla, Aug 8, (AP): A red-hot voyage to the sun is going to bring us closer to our star than ever before.

NASA’s Parker Solar Probe will be the first spacecraft to “touch” the sun, hurtling through the sizzling solar atmosphere and coming within just 3.8 million miles (6 million kilometers) of the surface.

It’s designed to take solar punishment like never before, thanks to its revolution­ary heat shield that’s capable of withstandi­ng 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit (1,370 degrees Celsius).

Liftoff is set for the pre-dawn hours of Saturday for this first-of-its-kind mission to a star.

“The coolest, hottest mission, baby, that’s what it is,” said Nicola Fox, the project scientist at Johns Hopkins University.

Roughly the size of a small car, Parker will get nearly seven times closer to the sun than previous spacecraft. To snuggle up to the sun, it will fly past Venus seven times over seven years. Each flyby will provide an orbit-shaping gravity boost, drawing it ever closer to the sun and straight into the corona — the sun’s outermost atmosphere.

The closer, the better for figuring out why the corona is hundreds of times hotter than the sun’s surface. Another mystery scientists hope to solve: What drives the solar wind? That’s the steady, supersonic stream of charged particles blasting off the corona and into space in all directions.

“There are missions that are studying the solar wind, but we’re going to get to the birthplace,” Fox said.

Scientists expect the $1.5 billion mission to shed light not only on our own dynamic sun, but the billions of other yellow dwarf stars — and other types of stars — out there in the Milky Way and beyond. While granting us life, the sun also has the power to disrupt spacecraft in orbit, and communicat­ions and electronic­s on Earth.

“This is where we live,” said NASA solar astrophysi­cist Alex Young. “We have to understand and characteri­ze this place that we’re traveling through.”

The project was proposed in 1958 to a brand-new NASA, and “60 years later, and it’s becoming a reality,” said project manager Andy Driesman, also of Johns Hopkins , which designed and built the spacecraft. The technology for surviving such a close solar encounter, while still being light enough for flight, wasn’t available until now.

Parker’s 8-foot (2.4-meter) heat shield is just 4 ó inches (11 centimeter­s) thick. Sandwiched between two carbon sheets is airy carbon foam. The front has a custom white ceramic coating to reflect sunlight; it’s expected to glow cherry red when bombarded by the extreme solar heat.

Almost everything on the spacecraft will be behind this and thus in roomtemper­ature shade while ducking through the jagged edges of the corona, without so much as a blister on its science instrument­s.

The spacecraft will hit 430,000 mph (690,000 kph) in the corona at closest approach. That’s equivalent to going from Washington, DC, to Philadelph­ia in a split second. Or Chicago to Beijing in under a minute.

This is the first NASA spacecraft to be named after someone still alive.

Eugene Parker, 91, professor emeritus at the University of Chicago, predicted the existence of solar wind 60 years ago. He plans be at Cape Canaveral for the launch. United Launch Alliance’s Delta IV Heavy rocket is providing the muscle.

Also: CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla:

The first of Christa McAuliffe’s lost lessons finally was released from space Tuesday, 32 years after she died aboard Challenger.

NASA and the Challenger Center for Space Science Education posted a video of astronaut-educator Ricky Arnold performing one of McAuliffe’s experiment­s aboard the Internatio­nal Space Station.

McAuliffe, a high school social studies teacher from Concord, New Hampshire, never got to teach from space. She perished during the launch of shuttle Challenger on Jan 28, 1986, along with her six crewmates.

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla:

SpaceX used its newest style booster for a second time to put a communicat­ions satellite into orbit for Indonesia.

The Falcon 9 rocket blasted off early Tuesday morning from Cape Canaveral, Florida.

The first-stage booster previously soared in May, the first time out the gate for this upgraded rocket.

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