Sunday, 12 August 2018 15:26 UTC
This morning at 07:31 UTC, NASA launched the Parker Solar Probe into space. While the launch was postponed on Saturday, everything went according to plan on Sunday and the Parker Solar Probe is now on it's way towards the Sun.
The Parker Solar Probe which is named after Eugene Parker, the American scientist that predicted the existence of the solar wind back in 1958, will come very close to the solar surface (closest approach of about 6.2 million kilometers) which is something that has never been done before. NASA hopes that the Parker Solar Probe will discover why the corona is so incredibly hot compared to the Sun's surface and what accelerates the solar wind.
The trajectory of the Parker Solar Probe will include seven flybys of the planet Venus over nearly seven years. This is done to slow the Parker Solar Probe down and it will gradually shrink its elliptical orbit around the Sun. It's science mission will take place during those 7 years, focusing on the periods when the spacecraft is closest to the Sun. At closest approach, the Parker Solar Probe will achieve a temporary but incredible velocity of up to 200 km/s!
Header image: Artistic rendition of the Parker Solar Probe.
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Current data suggests there is a slight possibility for aurora to appear at the following high latitude regions in the near future
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The OVATION model predicts the Hemispheric Power Index to reach 54GW at 07:01 UTC
Minor G1 geomagnetic storm (Kp5) Threshold Reached: 05:51 UTC
Moderate M2.05 flare
Minor R1 radio blackout in progress (≥M1 - current: M1.71)
Minor G1 geomagnetic storm (Kp5) Threshold Reached: 22:37 UTC
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