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China's first solar probe set for launch next year

China Daily Global | Updated: 2021-01-27 08:55
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NANJING-China's first solar probe, Advanced Space-based Solar Observatory, or ASO-S, is scheduled to launch in the first half of 2022, marking the country's first-ever mission to observe the sun.

The satellite will operate in a sun-synchronous polar orbit 720 kilometers above Earth to maintain a view of the star 24 hours a day. Weighing about 1,000 kilograms in total mass, the satellite is expected to be in orbit for at least four years, according to the Purple Mountain Observatory of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, a research institute based in Nanjing, East China's Jiangsu province.

The main scientific objectives of the probe include observing the sun's magnetic field and two major eruptive phenomena, solar flares and coronal mass ejections, or CMEs. It will deploy three payloads, including a Full-disk Vector Magnetograph, a Hard X-ray Imager, and a Lyman-alpha Solar Telescope.

The sun is the only fixed star that can be studied in detail by humans. The vast majority of its radiation is blocked by Earth's atmosphere. Only by sending probes into space can a complete picture of the sun be presented for further studies.

As the sun's temper varies on an 11-year cycle and the star enters Solar Cycle 25, it is estimated to reach its peak radiation around 2025. The solar probe can help obtain detailed records of solar activity during its rise to its peak years, says Gan Weiqun, a researcher with the institute.

The satellite will also realize its potential in space weather forecasting. The CMEs can be detected at least 40 hours ahead of their arrival by the observatory, which is expected to further facilitate early warnings of damage to Earth's electromagnetic environment.

Since the 1960s, more than 70 satellites related to solar observation have been launched globally. The ASO-S is expected to plug China's gap in the field, according to Gan.

Xinhua

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