Isro’s space probe to study the Sun: What is the Aditya-L1 mission, its significance
- August 15, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Isro’s space probe to study the Sun: What is the Aditya-L1 mission, its significance
Subject :Science and technology
Section: Space technology
Context:
- The Indian Space Research Organisation (Isro) on August 14 released images of the Aditya-L1 mission — the space agency’s first attempt to study the Sun.
Details:
- The satellite has reached the Satish Dhawan Space Center (SDSC) in Sriharikota, Andhra Pradesh, for its integration with the launch vehicle, PSLV.
What is the Aditya-L1 mission?
- The Aditya-L1 will observe the Sun from a close distance, and try to obtain information about its atmosphere and magnetic field.
- It’s equipped with seven payloads (instruments) on board to study the Sun’s corona, solar emissions, solar winds and flares, and Coronal Mass Ejections (CMEs), and will carry out round-the-clock imaging of the Sun.
Why is studying the Sun important?
- The solar weather and environment affect the weather of the entire system.
- Variations in this weather can change the orbits of satellites or shorten their lives, interfere with or damage onboard electronics, and cause power blackouts and other disturbances on Earth.
- Knowledge of solar events is key to understanding space weather.
- To learn about and track Earth-directed storms, and to predict their impact, continuous solar observations are needed.
- Every storm that emerges from the Sun and heads towards Earth passes through L1, and a satellite placed in the halo orbit around L1 of the Sun-Earth system has the major advantage of continuously viewing the Sun without any occultation/eclipses.
What is Lagrange Point-1 (L1):
- L1 refers to Lagrangian/Lagrange Point 1, one of five points in the orbital plane of the Earth-Sun system.
- Lagrange Points, named after Italian-French mathematician Josephy-Louis Lagrange, are positions in space where the gravitational forces of a two-body system (like the Sun and the Earth) produce enhanced regions of attraction and repulsion.
- These can be used by spacecraft to reduce fuel consumption needed to remain in position.
- The L1 point is home to the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory Satellite (SOHO), an international collaboration project of NASA and the European Space Agency (ESA).
- The L1 point is about 1.5 million km from Earth, or about one-hundredth of the way to the Sun.
- Aditya L1 will perform continuous observations looking directly at the Sun.
- NASA’s Parker Solar Probe, launched in 2018, has already gone far closer — but it will be looking away from the Sun.
- The earlier Helios 2 solar probe, a joint venture between NASA and the space agency of erstwhile West Germany, went within 43 million km of the Sun’s surface in 1976.
How much heat will the Aditya-L1 face?
- The Parker Solar Probe during its flyby of the Sun has faced blisteringly hot temperatures of more than one thousand degree Celsius and remained fully operational.
- The Aditya-L1, however, will not face such heat as it is slated to stay much further away from the Sun in comparison with NASA’s mission.
- But there are other challenges.
- Many of the instruments and their components for this mission are being manufactured for the first time in India, presenting as much of a challenge as an opportunity for the country’s scientific, engineering, and space communities.