NASA's Van Allen Probes Reveal New Dynamics of Earth's Radiation Belts
Just 96 days since their launch, NASA's twin Van Allen
Probes have already provided new insights into the structure and
behavior of the radiation belts that surround Earth, giving scientists a
clearer understanding about the fundamental physical properties of
these regions more than half a century after their discovery.
In a press conference on Tuesday, Dec. 4 at the American Geophysical
Union's 2012 Fall Meeting in San Francisco, members of the Van Allen
Probes science team discussed current findings made in unlocking the
mysteries of the radiation belts. These two donut-shaped regions of
high-energy and hazardous particles -- named for their discoverer and
the mission's namesake, American physicist James Van Allen of the
University of Iowa -- are created by our planet's magnetosphere, and can
harm space technologies such as satellites, as well as affect human
space travel.
Throughout the brief early life of the two-year mission, energetic
events and ejections of plasma from the sun caused dramatic changes in
the radiation belts that, for the first time, were observed by twin
spacecraft within the belts. "The sun has been a driver of these systems
more than we had any right to expect," says Daniel Baker, Principal
Investigator, Van Allen Probes Relativistic Electron Proton Telescope
(REPT, which is part of the Energetic Particle, Composition, and Thermal
Plasma Suite, or ECT), from the Laboratory for Atmospheric and Space
Physics (LASP) at the University of Colorado, Boulder. "We're seeing
brand new features we hadn't expected."
The twin probes, built and managed for NASA by the Johns Hopkins
University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Md., contain
identical sets of five instrument suites. These suites have confirmed
previous hypotheses about the belts' behavior, while also revealing that
the belts are a far more dynamic and changing environment than
previously thought. "We expected to see a fairly placid radiation belt
system," Baker says. "Instead, we see that the belts have been
extraordinarily active and dynamic during the first few weeks. We're
looking in the right places at the right times."
Our planet's magnetosphere captures particles from the billions of
tons of plasma ejected by the sun and from other sources; fields and
waves of electricity and magnetism control and guide the charged
particles within the belts, with the particles "surfing" on the waves,
losing or gaining large amounts of energy along the way as they enter
and leave the region. Measurements made by instruments like the Electric
Fields and Waves Suite (EFW) and the Electric and Magnetic Field
Instrument Suite and Integrated Science (EMFISIS) are helping scientists
understand how those fields and waves affect the particles. "The
electric field and magnetic field measurements on the Van Allen Probes
are the best ever made in the radiation belts," says the University of
Iowa's Craig Kletzing, Principal Investigator for EMFISIS. "For the
first time, we've been able to see how long intense low frequency
electric fields and waves at the edge of the radiation belts can last --
sometimes for over five hours during geomagnetic storms. Before, it was
like we could see a car zoom past, but not see anything about the
details. Now, we can see what color the upholstery is."
The inner belt, where many satellites must operate, is home to the
most hazardous and energized particles, mostly protons. "A staggering
number of the spacecraft we rely upon daily have to spend a part of
their orbit in the harshest area of Earth's radiation environment," says
Joseph Mazur of the Aerospace Corporation, Principal Investigator of
the probes' Relativistic Proton Spectrometer (RPS). The Van Allen Probes
are providing researchers with detailed views of how the populations of
those particles vary with altitude, which should help engineers more
effectively protect satellites. "This is the first time we've been able
to measure the high energy particles in the heart of the radiation
belts," Mazur said. "We're able to measure at the one billion electron
volt level; particles at that energy are virtually impossible to shield
against. They will easily penetrate half-inch thick aluminum plate."
Particles at that energy level are known to cause a range of damages to
spacecraft, from physical degradation to instrument malfunctions and
false readings.
"NASA built these spacecraft to be super tough, and thank goodness we
did," says APL's Nicky Fox, Van Allen Probes deputy project scientist.
"The instruments are seeing the exact sorts of damaging effects we
designed the spacecraft to survive."
The Van Allen Probes are part of NASA's Living With a Star Program to
explore aspects of the connected sun-Earth system that directly affect
life and society. LWS is managed by the agency's Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Md. APL built the twin spacecraft and manages the
mission for NASA.
ليست هناك تعليقات