[HN Gopher] Solar Orbiter passes historically close to sun on Sa...
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Solar Orbiter passes historically close to sun on Saturday
Author : Brajeshwar
Score : 30 points
Date : 2022-03-26 17:17 UTC (5 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (earthsky.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (earthsky.org)
| theflyingelvis wrote:
| Surely it'll do this at night when the sun's not as hot?
| adhesive_wombat wrote:
| Are you insane? You want to send the spacecraft through the
| Arctic portal into the hollow core of the Earth after the
| setting Sun?
|
| That would be a declaration of war on the Reptilians!
| vanattab wrote:
| Naturally
| inimino wrote:
| > On this date, Solar Orbiter will be less than 1/3 the distance
| from the sun to Earth. That's [...] about 1/3 of an astronomical
| unit (AU).
|
| Does the journalist know what an AU is?
|
| For those that don't know, an AU _is_ the distance from the earth
| to the sun, so you could just as well write:
|
| "On this date, Solar Orbiter will be less than 1/3 the distance
| from the sun to Earth. That's 29.8 million miles (48 million km)
| or about 1/3 of the distance from the sun to Earth."
|
| (And yes, since if I don't point this out someone else will,
| strictly speaking the AU is defined as some fixed number of
| meters. But that number wasn't pulled out of a hat...)
| sbierwagen wrote:
| While I'm sure 48 million km is "historic" for the ESA's solar
| probe, Parker's most recent perihelion was 8.5 million km:
| http://parkersolarprobe.jhuapl.edu/index.php
|
| It's planned to hit 6.9 million km in 2025. (Ten solar radii)
| Victerius wrote:
| Why not 0 km?
| sbierwagen wrote:
| While it would be fun to punt a billion dollar spacecraft
| into the sun just to see the weird spikes on the telemetry
| data, you can't actually get any realtime data from the probe
| during close solar approach. Stars emit quite a lot of RF,
| and the antenna on Parker has to be small enough to fit
| behind the sunshield. Parker has to survive each perihelion
| in a functional state in order to downlink readings.
|
| Presumably after the end of the scheduled mission there will
| an attempt to get funding for an extended mission to take it
| in closer. My impression is they can't put it on the official
| schedule if it's not funded, and speculatively funding
| spacecraft operations decades into the future would take big
| chunks out of NASA's budget.
| jancsika wrote:
| > While it would be fun to punt a billion dollar spacecraft
| into the sun just to see the weird spikes on the telemetry
| data, you can't actually get any realtime data from the
| probe during close solar approach.
|
| Such a glaring blind spot could potentially hinder law
| enforcement to the point that visibility into future
| investigations goes completely dark.
|
| What would it take to blow up the sun?
| lizardactivist wrote:
| It's not a competition.
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(page generated 2022-03-26 23:01 UTC)