A pair of Sun-watching satellites launched into the
night sky above Florida late Wednesday, kicking off a NASA mission to take three-dimensional
(3-D) images of our nearest star.
NASA's nearly
identical STEREO
spacecraft rocketed spaceward atop a Boeing Delta 2 booster after a
successful 8:52 p.m. EDT (0038 Oct. 26 GMT) liftoff from Cape Canaveral Air
Force Station.
"The
satellites are in their intended orbit and everything went as planned," NASA launch director Omar Baez said just
after liftoff.
With their unique
flying formation--one STEREO vehicle will eventually lead the Earth while
the other lags behind--the satellites will generate the first near real-time, 3-D
images of the Sun. STEREO's solar quarries are coronal
mass ejections (CMEs), immense eruptions from the Sun that spew high-energy particles which can
pose a radiation
hazard for astronauts and satellites,
as well as interfere with power and communications systems on Earth.
With NASA's
plan to send astronauts on long-duration missions to the Moon--let alone a future multiple-year
trip of a Mars-bound flight--more dependable CME and space weather prediction
will prove vital, researchers said.
"They can receive
a year's worth of radiation in one of these storms," STEREO project manager
Nicholas Chrissotimos, of NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center, said of astronauts working outside a spacecraft or lunar shelter. "If
we can predict when these storms occur, we can at least safe the astronauts
during these timeframes so they are not exposed to this environment."
Engineers
at the Johns Hopkins University's Applied Physics Laboratory built the STEREO
spacecraft for NASA, and will oversee the $550 million mission from a control
center in Laurel, Maryland.
Thursday's
launch came after a series of delays, including last-minute range safety and
booster concerns that were ultimately cleared, but only after pushing the space
shot to the end of its 15-minute launch window.
"We are at
the dawn of a new age of solar observation," said the
U.S. Naval Research Laboratory's Russ Howard, principal investigator for one of
STEREO's instrument suites. "We are going to be viewing things in a new
dimension."
Eyes on
the Sun
The twin STEREO--short
for Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory--spacecraft are aptly named. On
vehicle, billed as Ahead, is destined to lead the Earth in its orbit while the satellite's
Behind counterpart will lag aft of the planet.
In order to
reach their final positions, STEREO's Ahead vehicle will slingshot around the
Moon to move into an Earth-leading orbit. The Behind vehicle, meanwhile, will
make another swing past the Moon to reach its Earth-trailing position. Both STEREO
spacecraft are expected to slowly widen the gap between each other over time,
mission managers said.
Each STEREO
satellite packs 16 Sun-watching instruments into a frame about the size of a
golf cart and weighs about 1,364 pounds (620 kilograms). Researchers hope to
bring the Sun-watching duo online after a 90-day checkout period to add to current
assets like Solar and Heliospheric
Observatory (SOHO) and other missions such as Wind
and Advanced
Composition Explorer (ACE).
"Just like
you cannot measure ocean current with just a few buoys, you really cannot try
to understand this space environment with just a few observatories," NASA's
STEREO program scientist Madhulika Guhathakurta said
before today's launch.