News on research satellites
- Will we ever travel to an earthlike exoplanet and how?
- The "Pioneer anomali" explained
- DAWN will stay with Vesta for an extra 40 days
- Voygare 1 still far from the interstellar medium
- Nuclear spaceship being prepared for launch
- Rocket launched into Aurora
- Satellite images of nighttime lights help track disease outbreak
- Voyage1 shuts down heat but continues another 13 years
- Voyager1 reaches a pause to interstellar space
- First images from VIIRS
- First space-measurements of Earths water-vapor
- Mission to touch the Sun in 2018
- Manned mission to asteroid
- ROSAT crashes to Earth
- ESA chooses next two science missions
- UARS satellite plunged into the Pacific Ocean
- Exploring an asteroid with the Desert RATS
- UARS satellite crashed - location unknown
- The 6 ton UARS satelite crasches tonight
- Underwater training for manned asteroid mission underwater
- 6ton NASA satellite soon to crash
- Spacejunk is a problem but tiny bits are worse
- Tour the Solarsystem with spaceprobes
- Jupiter-Bound spacecraft captures Earth and Moon
- Juno Spacecraft Launches to Jupiter
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Rocket launched into Aurora
Tuesday, 21 February 2012 14:27
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| Spaceflight - Research satellites |
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Together with NASA, 2 US universities has launched a rocket 320km up in the aurora to detect socalled Alfven waves and to learn more about why and how solar storms affects the GPS system
With the full sky shimmering in green aurora, Saturday night (Feb. 18, 2012) a team of scientists, including space physicist Marc Lessard and graduate students from the University of New Hampshire's Space Science Center, launched an instrument-laden, two-stage sounding rocket from the Poker Flat Research Range in Alaska. The precision measurements from the rocket's instruments will shed new light on the physical processes that create the northern lights and further our understanding of the complex sun-Earth connection. Funded by NASA, the Magnetosphere-Ionosphere Coupling in the Alfvén resonator (MICA) mission sent a 13m Terrier-Black Brant rocket arcing through aurora 320km above Earth. The rocket sent a stream of real-time data back before landing some 320km downrange shortly after the launch. The Alfvén resonator is a narrow, confined area of space - a channel that is perhaps several hundreds of miles tall but only six miles wide. It is hypothesized that energy from the sun accelerates a beam of electrons producing aurora and also increasing the overall electrical conductivity within the channel. Understanding how the ionosphere participates in providing the downward current is a critical component of understanding magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling. |




