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Friday, 26 September 2025
Trio of space weather satellites launched to study the Sun's violent side.
The Falcon 9 rocket launches from NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (Reuters/ Joe Skipper)
In short:
NASA has successfully launched a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket carrying three satellites from the Kennedy Space Centre in Florida.
The three satellites aim to monitor solar activity and its impact on space.
What's next?
Over
the next few months, the satellites will travel over 1 million
kilometres to their Sun-orbiting destination, with NASA expecting them
to be fully operational by January 2026.
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A
cluster of space weather satellites blasted off Wednesday morning to
cast fresh eyes on solar storms that can produce stunning auroras but
also scramble communications and threaten astronauts in flight.
The three satellites soared from the Kennedy Space Centre shortly after sunrise on the same SpaceX rocket.
They aimed for a Sun-orbiting lookout 1.6 million kilometres from Earth, each on its own separate mission.
SpaceX's Falcon 9 is the world’s first orbital class reusable rocket. (Reuters/ Joe Skipper)
Altogether,
the satellites from NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration (NOAA), plus related costs, are worth about $US1.6
billion ($2.4 billion).
NASA's director of Heliophysics, Joe Westlake, calls it "the ultimate cosmic carpool" by sharing a rocket to save money.
Heading the line-up is NASA's Interstellar Mapping and Acceleration Probe, the first to be deployed.
It will scrutinise the outer limits of the heliosphere, the protective, solar wind-driven bubble of gas around our solar system.
As
a bonus, IMAP will be capable of providing advance notice of solar
storms — a valuable 30-minute heads-up — for astronauts exploring the
Moon under NASA's Artemis program.
Officials expect the observatory to be fully operational by the time four astronauts fly around the Moon and back next year.
NASA's
smaller Carruthers Geocorona Observatory is also flying, set to focus
on Earth's outermost, glowing atmosphere that extends well beyond the
Moon.
It
is named after the late scientist George Carruthers, who invented the
ultraviolet telescope left on the Moon by the Apollo 16 astronauts in
1972.
NOAA's newest space weather observatory will be pushed into full-time, around-the-clock forecasting service.
It will keep tabs on the Sun's activity and measure the solar wind to help keep Earth safe from threatening flares.
Officials
expect NASA's satellites to be in position and operational by the
beginning of next year, and NOAA's spacecraft by spring.
NASA is kicking in more than $US879 million for its two missions, while NOAA's share is $US693 million.
While
NASA already has a fleet of Sun-observing spacecraft, science mission
chief Nicky Fox said these newer missions offer more advanced
instruments that will provide more sensitive measurements.
"Just being able to put all those together to give us a much, much better view of the Sun," she said.
The goal is to better understand the Sun in order to better protect Earth, according to officials.
As spectacular as they are, the northern and southern lights will not be the missions' focus.
NASA to return humans to the moon
During
a preview of NASA's upcoming Artemis mission around the Moon, science
officials said on Tuesday that these new space weather missions will
enhance forecasting and provide vital alerts if major solar activity
strikes.
If that happens, the
four astronauts will take temporary shelter in a storage area under the
capsule's floor to avoid the heightened radiation levels.
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