NASA next week will launch a satellite that the space agency says will scrutinize the Sun and send back "a prodigious rush of pictures" about sunspots, solar flares and a variety of other never-before-seen astrophysical activities.
The Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) will deliver high resolution images of the Sun ten times better than the average High-Definition television to help scientists understand more about the Sun and its disruptive influence on services like communications systems on Earth. Specifically, NASA says the SDO will beam back 150 million bits of data per second, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. That's almost 50 times more science data than any other mission in NASA history. It's like downloading 500,000 iTunes a day, NASA stated.
Layer 8 Extra: NASA telescopes watch cosmic violence, mysteries unravel
Key to the satellite's operation will be three high tech telescopes:
The satellite will also be placed in what NASA called a unique orbit. Unlike a geostationary orbit, which would keep the spacecraft above the same area of Earth all the time, the satellite will trace a figure-eight path above Earth, NASA said.
Such an orbit will let SDO watch the sun almost 24 hours a day, seven days a week, for at least five years with only brief interruptions as Earth passes between SDO and the sun, NASA said. To gather data from SDO's instruments, NASA has set up a pair of dedicated radio antennas near Las Cruces, New Mexico.
The orbit will also let high resolution images be recorded every three quarters of a second, providing in-depth information about the Sun's complex magnetic fields and space weather generated by solar flares and violent eruptions from the Sun's atmosphere known as Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs).
CME's are of particular interest because they can carry a billion tons of solar material into space at over a million kilometers per hour. Such events can expose astronauts to deadly particle doses, can disable satellites, cause power grid failures on Earth and disrupt communications, said Prof. Richard Harrison of the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory in the UK. The lab's engineers designed and built the electronics systems for SDO's six cameras on two of its instruments. Under contract from, Lockheed Martin, they developed the electronics boxes which control and read out the data from SDO's cameras.
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