STEREO Reaches New Milestone At Its Sixth Anniversary
On the evening of Oct. 25, 2006, the twin Solar Terrestrial Relations
Observatory (STEREO) spacecraft launched into space, destined for fairly simple
orbits: both circle the sun like Earth does, STEREO-A traveling in a slightly
smaller and therefore faster orbit, STEREO-B traveling in a larger and slower
orbit. Those simple orbits, however, result in interesting geometry. As one
spacecraft gained an increasing lead over Earth, the other trailed further and
further behind. In February of 2011, each STEREO spacecraft was situated on
opposite sides of the sun, and on Sept. 1, 2012, the two spacecraft and and the
Solar Dynamics Observatory (at Earth) formed an equal-sided triangle, with each
observatory providing overlapping views of the entire sun.
Since
its launch in 2006, the STEREO spacecraft have
drifted further and further apart to gain
different
views
of the sun. Credit: NASA/GSFC
|
By providing such unique viewpoints, STEREO has offered scientists the ability
to see all sides of the sun simultaneously for the first time in history,
augmented with a view from Earth's perspective by NASA's Solar Dynamics
Observatory (SDO). In addition to giving researchers a view of active regions
on the sun before they even come over the horizon, combining two views is
crucial for three-dimensional observations of the giant filaments that dance
off the sun's surface or the massive eruptions of solar material known as
coronal mass ejections (CMEs). Examine the images below to see how a feature on
the sun can look dramatically different from two perspectives.
This map of the full sun on Oct. 14, 2012, was created by images from, in order from left to right, STEREO-A, STEREO-B and SDO. Credit: NASA/STEREO/SDO/GSFC |
0 comments:
Post a Comment