The NASA SunRISE mission, which stands for the Sun Radio Interferometer Space Experiment, is an upcoming mission expected to launch in 2024 to study and pinpoint how giant bursts of energetic particles originate from the Sun and evolve as they expand outward into space.
Now, NASA has rolled out the first small satellites which will be used in conjunction as individual radio sensors during this mission. Jim Lux, SunRISE project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Southern California said, “It's really exciting to see the space vehicles coming together.”
According to NASA, the SunRISE mission will have a radio telescope in orbit with an array of six toaster-size CubeSats that will work together to study solar activity. The mission will observe low radio frequency emissions to better understand the generation of Solar Storms as well as other explosive space events. This research will help scientists forecast space weather, improve our understanding of how our Sun works, and may apply to studies of other stars.
NASA says the six CubeSats will span roughly six miles across and fly slightly above geosynchronous orbit at 22,000 miles from Earth's surface.
Joseph Lazio, SunRISE project scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory said, “The unique formation of the CubeSats gives us a detailed view of the Sun that will help us figure out how high energy particle radiation is initiated and accelerated near the Sun and how it affects interplanetary space.”
“Studying the radio waves that precede solar particle storms could potentially help us create an early warning system,” he further added.
Scientists will create a huge aperture radio telescope as wide as the distance between the small satellites are farthest in
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