An unmanned Delta rocket lifted off from Cape Canaveral air force station in Florida on Wednesday carrying a pair of solar probes to track potentially disruptive solar storms.
The Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory, or Stereo, is designed to take three-dimensional pictures of the solar outbursts so scientists can, for the first time, pinpoint where the storms are heading.
The eruptions, called coronal mass ejections, can shut down communications and navigational satellites, affect aircraft near Earth’s poles and zap electrical grids as billions of tonnes of charged particles are sent streaming into space.
”Right now we can only see the sun, essentially, in just two dimensions,” said Stereo deputy project scientist Terry Kucera. ”We can’t tell in some cases whether coronal mass ejections are moving toward us or away from us. That’s pretty fundamental.”
”With 3D, we’ll be able to tell basic things like how fast is it going, is it speeding up or slowing down?” he said. ”These are important things that we need to know if we’re going to be able to predict what the impact of a particular event is going to be.”
The satellites were launched on a Boeing-built Delta rocket, which lifted off at 8:52pm EDT (00.52am GMT).
They were placed in a temporary, looping orbit around Earth. On December 15, lunar gravity will slingshot the first spacecraft into a solar orbit just ahead of Earth’s path.
The second satellite will be flung into an orbit lagging Earth on January 21. From the perspective of the sun, the spacecraft will orbit 45° apart, providing enough distance to work like a pair of human eyes that can see in three dimensions.
Stereo’s focus will be on coronal mass ejections, which are huge bubbles of charged particles that blast away from the sun’s outer atmosphere after a solar flare. The particles trigger the beautiful auroras seen in the northern and southern skies, but they have a dark side as well.
A massive solar storm in 1989 took out a power grid in Canada, shutting off electricity for 6-million residents. Three years ago, Japan lost contact with a satellite after a series of solar eruptions.
”In terms of space-weather forecasting, we’re where weather forecasters were in the 1950s,” said Michael Kaiser, a Stereo project scientist. ”They didn’t see hurricanes until the rain clouds were right above them.” – Reuters