Scientific News Physics Astrophysics NASA SPACECRAFT PROVIDES CRITICAL LINK IN SUN-EARTH CHAIN. TIMED OBSERVES ATMOSPHERE'S RESPONSE TO RECENT SOLAR STORMS.
NASA SPACECRAFT PROVIDES CRITICAL LINK IN
SUN-EARTH CHAIN. TIMED OBSERVES ATMOSPHERE'S RESPONSE TO RECENT SOLAR STORMS.
NASA's TIMED
(Thermosphere, Ionosphere, Mesosphere, Energetics and Dynamics) spacecraft recently observed our
atmosphere's response to a series of strong solar storms, providing important
new information on the final link in the Sun-Earth Connection (SEC) chain of
physical processes connecting the Sun and Earth.
"Several NASA spacecraft measured this
strong activity coming from the Sun. Now TIMED provides the critical link
between what happened on the Sun and Earth's response," says Dr. Sam Yee,
TIMED project scientist, from the spacecraft's operations center at the Johns
Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory in Laurel, Md., and leader of the
mission's science team.
"TIMED allows us to observe the global
reaction of our upper atmosphere to solar activity," says Dr. Mary Mellott,
TIMED program scientist from NASA Headquarters in Washington. "One of the
current puzzles for the Sun-Earth Connection community is determining why some
solar activity has significant geospace impact and some does not. Being able to
monitor the impact so well with TIMED should allow the scientific community to
make significant progress toward solving this SEC mystery."
Preliminary TIMED data will be featured in
a special session at the Spring 2002 American Geophysical Union meeting, May 31,
in Washington, D.C., which is open to the media. Information about this session
can be found at www.agu.org/meetings/sm02Sessions.html#SA
(item SA02). Interested members of the press should visit www.agu.org/sci_soc/media.html
for registration information.
Since TIMED's science mission began in January
2002, science team members say it has made great strides in helping them learn
more about one of Earth's least understood atmospheric regions-the Mesosphere
and Lower Thermosphere/Ionosphere-a gateway between Earth's environment and
space. TIMED is the first of NASA's Solar Terrestrial Probes missions to
globally study the influences of the Sun and humans on the MLTI region, located
approximately 40-110 miles (60-180 kilometers) above the surface.
"TIMED's study of short-term events, such as
the recent solar storms, will help us gain a better understanding of the
dynamics of this gateway region," says Dr. Yee. "But our main goal is
to understand the region's overall climate through a comprehensive set of global
measurements we're collecting using TIMED's 4-instrument suite. With the core
data we've already collected, we've taken the first step in assessing the
region's global characteristics and seasonal variations-information that will
help us establish a baseline for future studies."
Space weather in Earth's upper atmospheric
regions can change as suddenly as our weather patterns on the ground. It can
affect satellite communications and orbital tracking, spacecraft lifetimes and
the reentry of piloted vehicles. "When a change occurs in one region of our
atmosphere, it affects other regions," Dr. Yee says. "It's important
that we better understand how this gateway region responds to various solar
inputs, which affect our atmosphere's overall energy balance."
Images and videos of preliminary TIMED data
can be downloaded from www.timed.jhuapl.edu/press2/images.htm.
The Solar Terrestrial Probes Program Office at
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., oversees the TIMED mission
for the Office of Space Science at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. The
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, in Laurel, Md., built and
now operates the spacecraft, leads the project's science effort and manages the
mission's Science Data Center for NASA.
For more information about TIMED, visit the
APL Web site.
The Applied Physics Laboratory, a division
of The Johns Hopkins University, meets critical national challenges through the
innovative application of science and technology. For information, visit http://www.jhuapl.edu/
Media Contact
Kristi Marren
Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Laurel, MD 20723
Phone: 240-228-6268 or 443-778-6268
E-mail: Kristi.Marren@jhuapl.edu
Source of the given news and the copyrights
belong to a Johns
Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory
Publishing date: June 4, 2002
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