Solar Energy News  
SOLAR SCIENCE
Tracking sunspots up close
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Mar 28, 2022

illustration only

The ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter spacecraft is speeding towards its historic first close pass of the Sun, which happens midday on 26 March 2022.

In the days leading up to and around 'Perihelion passage', teams at ESA have been working intensively on an observation campaign, and all ten instruments will be operating simultaneously to gather as much data as possible.

This effort will include using its remote sensing instruments, like the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager to image the Sun, as well as in-situ instruments to measure the solar wind as it flows past the spacecraft.

Observing specific targets of scientific interest on the Sun requires close coordination between flight control teams and the flight dynamics experts at ESA's ESOC mission control centre, in Germany, and teams at the science operations centre at ESAC, in Spain.

ESA teams are using the full-disc telescopes on board Solar Orbiter to identify dynamic activity - like moving sunspots - on the surface, then will use these specific locations to calculate accurate pointing of the narrow-angle imager for later detailed observation.

Since the instruments are fixed in place to the spacecraft body, the entire spacecraft must be pointed with high precision to point to specific sunspots.

This cycle of using wide-angle images to select specific narrow-angle targets, then feeding the needed pointing back into flight control instructions takes place daily, with each iteration taking three days from initial imaging to uplink of new pointing instructions.

While such close coordination happens throughout the mission, the cycle is much speeded up during perihelion passage to ensure the best possible scientific value from 'up close' to the Sun.


Related Links
Solar Orbiter at ESA
Solar Science News at SpaceDaily


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SOLAR SCIENCE
Nearby star could help explain why our Sun didn't have sunspots for 70 years
University Park PA (SPX) Mar 23, 2022
he number of sunspots on our Sun typically ebbs and flows in a predictable 11-year cycle, but one unusual 70-year period when sunspots were incredibly rare has mystified scientists for three hundred years. Now a nearby Sun-like star seems to have paused its own cycles and entered a similar period of rare starspots, according to a team of researchers at Penn State. Continuing to observe this star could help explain what happened to our own Sun during this "Maunder Minimum" as well as lend insight into th ... read more

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