Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. GPS News .




SOLAR SCIENCE
HI-C sounding rocket mission has finest mirrors ever made
by Staff Writers
Greenbelt MD (SPX) Jul 13, 2012


Waiting for launch: NASA's HI-C mission, sitting in the front of this image, will launch on July 11, 2012, to observe the sun's corona in the highest detail ever captured during a 381-second flight. Credit: NASA.

On July 11, NASA scientists will launch into space the highest resolution solar telescope ever to observe the solar corona, the million degree outer solar atmosphere. The instrument, called HI-C for High Resolution Coronal Imager, will fly aboard a Black Brant sounding rocket to be launched from the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico.

The mission will have just 620 seconds for its flight, spending about half of that time high enough that Earth's atmosphere will not block ultraviolet rays from the sun. By looking at a specific range of UV light, HI-C scientists hope to observe fundamental structures on the sun, as narrow as 100 miles across.

"Other instruments in space can't resolve things that small, but they do suggest - after detailed computer analysis of the amount of light in any given pixel - that structures in the sun's atmosphere are about 100 miles across," says Jonathan Cirtain, a solar scientist at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Ala. who is the project scientist for HI-C.

"And we also have theories about the shapes of structures in the atmosphere, or corona, that expect that size. HI-C will be the first chance we have to see them."

The spatial resolution on HI-C is some five times more detailed than the Atmospheric Imaging Assembly (AIA) instrument on the Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO), that can resolve structures down to 600 miles and currently sends back some of our most stunning and scientifically useful images of the sun.

Of course, AIA can see the entire sun at this resolution, while HI-C will focus on an area just one-sixth the width of the sun or 135,000 miles across. Also, AIA observes the sun in ten different wavelengths, while HI-C will observe just one: 193 Angstroms. This wavelength of UV light corresponds to material in the sun at temperatures of 1.5 million Kelvin and that wavelength is typically used to observe material in the corona.

During its ten-minute journey, HI-C will focus on the center of the sun, where a large sunspot is predicted to be - a prediction based on what the sun looked like 27 days previously, since it takes 27 days for the sun to complete a full rotation.

"We will start acquiring data at 69 seconds after launch, at a rate of roughly an image a second," says Cirtain. "We will be able to look through a secondary H-alpha telescope on the instrument in real time and re-point the main telescope as needed."

In addition to seeing the finest structures yet seen in the sun's corona, the launch of HI-C will serve as a test bed for this high-resolution telescope. Often one improves telescope resolution simply by building bigger mirrors, but this is not possible when constraining a telescope to the size of a sounding rocket, or even a long-term satellite.

So HI-C's mirror is only about nine and a half inches across, no bigger than that of AIA. However, the HI-C mirrors, made by a team at Marshall, are some of the finest ever made, says Cirtain. If one could see the surface at an atomic level, it would show no greater valleys or peaks than two atoms in either direction.

"So it's super smooth," says Cirtain.

In addition, the team created a longer focal length - that is, they increased the distance the light travels from its primary mirror to its secondary mirror, another trick to improve resolution - by creating a precise inner maze for the light to travel from mirror to mirror, rather than a simple, shorter straight line.

.


Related Links
Goddard Space Flight Center
Solar Science News at SpaceDaily






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








SOLAR SCIENCE
Researchers create 'MRI' of the sun's interior motions
New York NY (SPX) Jul 13, 2012
A team of scientists has created an "MRI" of the Sun's interior plasma motions, shedding light on how it transfers heat from its deep interior to its surface. The result, which appears in the journal the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, upends our understanding of how heat is transported outwards by the Sun and challenges existing explanations of the formation of sunspots and mag ... read more


SOLAR SCIENCE
Climate change means stressed cows may have less milk

Sustainability of rice landscapes in South East Asia threatened

Ancient domesticated remains are oldest in southern Africa

France sends emergency anti-locust aid

SOLAR SCIENCE
Toward Achieving One Million Times Increase in Computing Efficiency

Intel pumps billions into computer chip tool maker

Japan's Renesas eyes $550 mn savings, cutting 5,000 jobs

Discovery of material with amazing properties

SOLAR SCIENCE
Raytheon and US Navy begin MALD-J Super Hornet integration

Lockheed Martin F-35 Flight Test Progress Report

Taiwan aircraft maker looks to F-16 upgrade deal

Farnborough lives up to reputation

SOLAR SCIENCE
Skoda Auto posts record first-half sales on China surge

Carnegie Mellon's smart headlight system will have drivers seeing through the rain

EU push for car CO2 cuts faces industry, green criticism

China auto sales up 9.9% in June: industry group

SOLAR SCIENCE
Australia's resource boom to decline?

Paraguay not facing suspension: OAS

Myanmar to charge Thai rubber workers

HSBC to apologise over lax money laundering controls: report

SOLAR SCIENCE
Rising CO2 in atmosphere also speeds carbon loss from forest soils

Taiwan indicts loggers for axing 2000-year-old trees

Study Slashes Deforestation Carbon Emission Estimate

Scientists develop first satellite deforestation tracker for whole of Latin America

SOLAR SCIENCE
New eyes in the sky

IGARSS 2012 - 'Remote Sensing for a Dynamic Earth'

MSG-3 set to ensure quality of Europe's weather service from geostationary orbit

Images in an Instant: Suomi NPP Begins Direct Broadcast

SOLAR SCIENCE
Ferroelectricity on the Nanoscale

Unprecedented subatomic details of exotic ferroelectric nanomaterials

Tiny bubbles snap carbon nanotubes like twigs

Nanodiamonds cut through dirt to bring back 'bling' to low temperature laundry




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement