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Parker Solar Probe à diet 3-ff Hardwoofedt | First Pictures From the Parker Solar Probe *Here are the First Pictures From the Parker Solar Probe. Wait... That's Not the Sun On August 12th, 2018, NASA launched the first spacecraft that will ever "touch" the face of the Sun. This was none other than the Parker Solar Probe, a mission that will revolutionize our understanding of the Sun, solar wind, and "space weather events like solar flares.Whereas previous missions have observed the Sun, the Parker Solar Probe will provide the closest observations in history by entering the Sun's atmosphere (aka the corona) And now, just over a month into the its mission, the Parker Solar Probe has captured and returned its first-light data This data, which consisted of images of the Milky Way and Jupiter, was collected by the probe's four instrument suites. While the images were not aimed at the Sun, the probe's primary focus of study, they successfully demonstrated that the Parker probe Instruments are in good working order. These instruments consist of the FIELDS magnetometer, the Wide-Field Imager for Parker Solar Probe (WISPR) imager, the Solar Wind Electrons Alphas and Protons (SWEAP) investigation, and the Integrated Science Investigation of the Sun (ISIOS) instrument. 

These instruments will work in tandem to measure the Sun's electric and magnetic fields, particles from the Sun and the solar wind, and capture images of the Sun's corona. The images that were acquired (shown at top, left to right) were taken by the WISPR instrument's outer and inner telescopes, respectively. The image on the left, which has a 58 field of view and extends to about 160° from the Sun, shows the disc of the Milky Way and is focused on the galactic center. The image on the right, which has a 40 field of view and is 58.5 degrees from the Sun's center (from its right edge) shows Jupiter as a bright dot. Parker Solar Probe, first images captured from parker solar probe,First Pictures From the Parker Solar Probe,parker solar probe in hindi,parker solar probe mission, parker solar probe nasa,parker solar probe current status Here Comes the Sun! Parker Solar Probe Instruments See First Light As Parker Solar Probe prepares for an unprece dented close-up of the sun, the new spacecraft sent data home showing that all is well in the mission
The probe's instruments showed the band of the Milky Way and picked up evidence of the solar wind, the constant stream of particles emanating from the sun. The spacecraft will swoop close to the sun in November of 2018 and, over the course of seven years and many orbits, will take periodic close-ups of the sun and zoom by Venus several times. Parker will come within 4 million miles (6.4 million kilometers) of the sun on its closest orbit that's more than eight times closer than the planet Mercury gets to the sun.One big mystery that Parker may help shed light on, so to speak, is why the sun's corona (or upper atmosphere is so much hotter than the layers below. The corona temperature ranges from 1.7 million degrees Fahrenheit (1 million degrees Celsius) to more than 17 million degrees F(10 million degrees C), according to the National Solar Observatory By contrast, the photosphere or surface of the sun reaches roughly 10,000 degrees F (5,500 degrees C). But to investigate that phenomenon, Parker's four instrument suites need to work correctly. Fortunately for mission investigators, the first data sent back in the month after launch shows that everything is working fine. All instruments returned data that not only serves for calibration but also captures glimpses of what we expect them to measure near the sun to solve the mysteries of the solar atmosphere, the corona project scientist Nour Raouafi, who is based at the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab in Maryland, said in a NASA statement

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