The Star Malaysia

‘Solar Orbiter’ blasts off to space

Spacecraft on historic mission to capture first look at sun’s elusive poles

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Europe and Nasa’s Solar Orbiter has rocketed into space on an unpreceden­ted mission to capture the first pictures of the sun’s elusive poles.

“We’re on the way to the sun. Go Solar Orbiter!” said Cesar Garcia Marirrodri­ga, project manager for the European Space Agency, after the launch on Sunday night.

“It’s a fantastic moment ... it’s like, well, we’re unstoppabl­e.”

The US$1.5bil (RM6.2bil) spacecraft will join Nasa’s Parker Solar Probe, launched a year and a half ago, in coming perilously close to the sun to unveil its secrets.

While Solar Orbiter won’t venture close enough to penetrate the sun’s corona, or crown-like outer atmosphere, like Parker, it will manoeuvre into a unique out-of-plane orbit that will take it over both poles, never photograph­ed before.

Together with powerful ground observator­ies, the sun-staring space duo will be like an orchestra, according to Gunther Hasinger, the European Space Agency’s science director.

“Every instrument plays a different tune, but together they play the symphony of the sun,” he said.

Solar Orbiter was made in Europe, along with nine science instrument­s. Nasa provided the 10th instrument and arranged the late-night launch from Cape Canaveral.

Nearly 1,000 scientists and engineers from across Europe gathered with their US colleagues under a full moon as United Launch Alliance’s

Atlas V rocket blasted off, illuminati­ng the sky for miles around. Crowds also jammed nearby roads and beaches.

The rocket was visible for four full minutes after lift-off, a brilliant star piercing the night sky.

Europe’s project scientist Daniel

Mueller was thrilled, calling it “picture perfect”.

His Nasa counterpar­t, scientist Holly Gilbert, said, “One word: Wow.”

Nasa declared success an hour and a half later, once Solar Orbiter’s solar wings were unfurled.

Solar Orbiter – a boxy 1,800kg spacecraft with spindly instrument booms and antennas – will swing past Venus in December and again next year, and then past Earth, using the planets’ gravity to alter its path.

Full science operations will begin in late 2021, with the first close solar encounter in 2022 and more every six months.

At its closest approach, Solar

Orbiter will come within 42 million km of the sun, well within the orbit of Mercury.

Parker Solar Probe, by contrast, has already passed within 18.6 million km of the sun, an all-time record, and is shooting for a slim gap of six million km by 2025.

But it is flying nowhere near the poles. That is where Solar Orbiter will shine.

The sun’s poles are pockmarked with dark, constantly shifting coronal holes. They are hubs for the sun’s magnetic field, flipping polarity every 11 years.

Solar Orbiter’s head-on views should finally yield a full 3D view of the sun, 150 million km from our home planet.

“With Solar Observator­y looking right down at the poles, we’ll be able to see these huge coronal hole structures,” said Nicola Fox, director of Nasa’s heliophysi­cs division.

“That’s where all the fast solar wind comes from ... it really is a completely different view.”

To protect the sensitive instrument­s from the sun’s blistering heat, engineers devised a heat shield with an outer black coating made of burned bone charcoal similar to what was used in prehistori­c cave paintings.

The 3m-by-2.4m heat shield is just 38cm thick and made of titanium foil with gaps in between to shed heat. It can withstand temperatur­es of up to nearly 530°C.

Embedded in the heat shield are five peepholes of varying sizes that will stay open just long enough for the science instrument­s to take measuremen­ts in X-ray, ultraviole­t, visible and other wavelength­s.

The observatio­ns will shed light on other stars, providing clues as to the potential habitabili­ty of worlds in other solar systems.

Closer to home, the findings will help scientists better predict space weather, which can disrupt communicat­ions.

“We need to know how the sun affects the local environmen­t here on Earth, and also Mars and the moon when we move there,” said Ian Walters, project manager for Airbus Defence and Space, which designed and built the spacecraft.

“We’ve been lucky so far the last 150 years,” since a colossal solar storm last hit.

“We need to predict that. We just can’t wait for it to happen.”

The US-European Ulysses spacecraft, launched in 1990, flew over the sun’s poles, but from farther afield and with no cameras on board. It’s been silent for more than a decade.

Europe and Nasa’s Soho spacecraft, launched in 1995, is still sending back valuable solar data.

Altogether, more than a dozen spacecraft have focused on the sun over the past 30 years. It took until now, however, for technology to allow elaborate spacecraft like Parker and Solar Orbiter to get close without being fried.

Fox considers it “a golden age” for solar physics.

“So much science still yet to do,” she said, “and definitely a great time to be a heliophysi­cist.”

 ?? — reuters ?? To infinity and beyond: ‘solar Orbiter’ lifting off at the Cape Canaveral air Force station in Cape Canaveral, Florida.
— reuters To infinity and beyond: ‘solar Orbiter’ lifting off at the Cape Canaveral air Force station in Cape Canaveral, Florida.

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