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Nasa’s Parker Solar Probe attempts closest ever approach to Sun

NASA artist's impression of the Parker Solar Probe spacecraft's flyby of the sunNASA

Parker Solar Probe set to break records with its hot flyby

A NASA spacecraft is trying to make history with its closest approach to the sun ever.

The Parker Solar Probe is penetrating deep into our star’s outer atmosphere, enduring harsh temperatures and extreme radiation.

It has been out of contact for several days during the scorching flyby, and scientists will wait for a signal (expected to be sent out at 05:00 GMT on December 28) to see if it survived.

The hope is that the probe will help us better understand how the sun works.

Dr Nicola Fox, NASA’s science director, told BBC News: “People have been studying the sun for centuries, but it’s not until you actually visit a place that you experience its atmosphere.

“So we can’t really experience the star’s atmosphere unless we fly through it.”

Image of the Sun from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory  NASA

The spacecraft will fly into the sun’s outer atmosphere

The Parker Solar Probe was launched in 2018 and headed to the center of the solar system.

It has passed the sun 21 times, getting closer and closer, but its Christmas Eve visit broke the record.

At its closest approach, the probe is 3.8 million miles (6.2 million kilometers) from the surface of our star.

That might not sound close, but NASA’s Nicola Fox puts it in perspective: “We’re 93 million miles from the sun, so if I put the sun and the Earth one meter apart, Parker The solar probe is only four centimeters from the sun – so it’s very close.”

The detector must withstand temperatures of 1,400 degrees Celsius and radiation that can damage onboard electronics.

It’s protected by an 11.5-centimetre (4.5-inch) thick carbon composite shield, but the spacecraft’s strategy is to get in and out quickly.

In fact, it will move faster than any man-made object, hurtling at 430,000 mph, the equivalent of flying from London to New York in less than 30 seconds.

Parker’s speed comes from the tremendous gravitational pull it feels as it falls toward the sun.

PA Media Northern Lights at Howick, Northumberland public media

Dazzling cosmic phenomena on Earth are caused by solar wind

So why go to so much effort to “touch” the sun?

Scientists hope that as the spacecraft passes through our star’s outer atmosphere – the corona – it will solve a long-standing mystery.

“The corona is really, really hot and we don’t know why,” explained astronomer Dr Jennifer Millard of the 5th Star Laboratory in Wales.

“The temperature of the sun’s surface is about 6,000 degrees Celsius or so, but the corona (this fragile outer atmosphere you can see during a solar eclipse) reaches millions of degrees – and is much further away from the sun. So how does the atmosphere become What’s hotter?”

The mission should also help scientists better understand the solar wind, the continuous stream of charged particles ejected from the solar corona.

When these particles interact with Earth’s magnetic field, the sky blooms with dazzling auroras.

But this so-called space weather can also cause problems, disrupting power grids, electronics and communications systems.

“Understanding the sun, its activity, space weather, the solar wind, is very important to our daily lives here on Earth,” Dr. Millard said.

Solar flare image from NASA's Solar Dynamics Observatory  NASA

Scientists hope probes can help us solve some solar mysteries

NASA scientists face an anxious wait over Christmas as the spacecraft loses contact with Earth.

Nicola Fox said once the signal came back home, the team texted her a green heart to let her know everything was fine with the detector.

She admitted she was nervous about the bold undertaking, but she was confident in the investigation.

“I would worry about the spacecraft. But we did design it to withstand all of these brutal conditions. It’s a very, very rugged little spacecraft.”

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