Inside The Sky at Night
April’s episode of The Sky at Night looks at ESA’s Solar Orbiter, and speaks to Helen O’Brien about her work on the project
Solar Orbiter, the European Space Agency’s new Sun explorer, blasted off from Cape Canaveral in February.
It is now heading for an encounter with Venus soon after Christmas. These encounters (there will be eight with Venus and one with Earth over the 10-year mission) will be instrumental in helping the spacecraft slow down enough to balance against the Sun’s gravity, and crucially also ‘catapult’ the spacecraft out of the ecliptic plane around the Sun (where all the planets orbit), allowing the first views of the Sun’s poles. This unique orbit, combined with a suite of scientific instruments offering remote sensing of the Sun’s surface and measurements of the solar wind particles streaming off the Sun, will give scientists the data they need to understand how energy is transferred from our star into the Solar System.
The spacecraft and instruments have taken over a decade to design and build, going through multiple prototypes and extensive testing before getting to the launch pad. The competing demands of the instruments and environment have generated challenge after challenge for ESA which has managed the project, Airbus in Stevenage which built the spacecraft and the 10 instrument teams from across Europe and the US. And there is little room for error. A speck of dust on a camera lens at launch would stay there forever, getting baked onto the lens surface and obscuring the view. A stray magnetic
field generated by an instrument circuit or the wrong choice of material, would swamp the detailed measurements of the solar wind. In the vacuum of space, the heat shield which protects the spacecraft from the extreme solar radiation (13 times more intense than experienced by satellites in Earth orbit) must radiate heat to avoid melting, while at the same time, sensors out on the boom in the heat shield’s shadow are in perpetual night time and must be heated to stay warm.
Lift off marks a huge moment in the lives of the
people working on this project. The first hint at what
we can expect will come over the summer, when the spacecraft reaches approximately 0.5 AU (where
1 AU is the distance from the Earth to the Sun) and
scientists get their first chance to try out coordinated
measurements sensing the Sun’s surface and measuring what is thrown out into space. The real excitement will come in spring 2022, with the spacecraft passing within 0.3 AU of the Sun. At this closest approach, Solar Orbiter will be able to focus on one region of the Sun for about a month, watching features evolve, and simultaneously sampling the
magnetic field and particle population passing the
spacecraft. This pristine solar wind, sampled close
to the source, combined with eyes on the Sun itself, will provide unprecedented insights into the connection between the Sun and its extended atmosphere that engulfs the whole Solar System. The Sun is incredibly dynamic: huge explosions driven by magnetic field interactions unleash energetic
particle populations capable of harming astronauts, knocking out satellites and causing problems with power grids here on Earth. Solar Orbiter will deliver new measurements to help us understand how these processes work, and ultimately make better predictions of space weather to keep our astronauts and technology safe.