![]() "The amount of light hitting the Parker Solar Probe determines how hot the spacecraft will get," Case explained. "That's the region we've flown into - an area where the plasma, atmosphere and wind are magnetically stuck and interacting with the Sun." According to data collected by the cup, the spacecraft entered the corona three times on April 28, at one point for up to five hours.ĬfA astrophysicist Anthony Case, the instrument scientist for the Solar Probe Cup, says the instrument itself is an incredible feat of engineering. "If you look at close-up pictures of the Sun, sometimes you'll see these bright loops or hairs that seem to break free from the Sun but then reconnect with it," Stevens explained. Prior to April 28, the spacecraft had been flying just beyond this point. The Alfven point is when solar winds exceed a critical speed and can break free of the corona and the Sun's magnetic fields. ![]() So, a basic part of this mission is to be able to measure whether or not we crossed this critical point." The corona is the outermost layer of the Sun's atmosphere where strong magnetic fields bind plasma and prevent turbulent solar winds from escaping. ![]() "The only way to do that is for the spacecraft to cross the outer boundary, which scientists call the Alfven point. We can accomplish this by flying into the solar atmosphere," said Michael Stevens, an astrophysicist at the CfA who helps monitor the cup. "The goal of this entire mission is to learn how the Sun works. The cup collects particles from the Sun's atmosphere that helped scientists verify that the spacecraft had indeed crossed into the corona. The historic moment was achieved thanks to a large collaboration of scientists and engineers, including members of the Center for Astrophysics | Harvard & Smithsonian (CfA) who built and monitor a key instrument on board the probe: the Solar Probe Cup. A scientific paper describing the milestone was published in the Physical Review Letters. On April 28, the Parker Solar Probe successfully entered the corona of the Sun - an extreme environment that's roughly 2 million degrees Fahrenheit. London, December 15 (ANI): A spacecraft launched by NASA has done what was once thought impossible.
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