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Three total solar eclipses will grace Earth during that spacecraft's seven-year mission studying the sun. Those events will reveal the otherwise-invisible solar atmosphere known as
the corona— precisely the part of the sun that the mission is focusing on.
The spacecraft, called the
Parker Solar Probe, launched on Aug. 12 and is well on its way to its first close approach of the sun, which is
scheduled for Nov. 5. It is designed to tackle questions about the sun that have haunted scientists for more than half a century. Those include why the corona is so much hotter than the visible surface of the sun and how the flood of charged particles known as the solar wind streams off the sun at such high speeds. [
The Greatest Missions to the Sun]
The data the Parker Solar Probe gathers will be unlike any scientists have ever been able to access. "It's literally like flying through and putting your hand outside the spacecraft and collecting observations directly as opposed to being 93 million miles [150 million kilometers] away and having really amazing telescopes that give us a unique perspective," Alex Young, a solar scientist at NASA, told Space.com. "You've got to be there up close and personal and measuring these things directly. Otherwise, you don't have a complete picture."
That's not to say eclipse data hasn't been valuable, of course. For more than a century, scientists have chased eclipses wherever celestial geometry has led them, desperate for
a glimpse of the fickle corona. That feature was only ever identified because of eclipse observations. Without the moon blocking out most of the sun's brightness, the corona is impossible to see at all, much less in any detail.
"One of the things that we gain from a total solar eclipse is we see the detailed structure [of the corona]," Young said. "Having this global viewpoint of the basic structure of the sun's atmosphere and then having the detailed observations of Parker Solar Probe really allows us to fill in the pieces of the puzzle. This really is a grand puzzle."
The first two eclipses during the mission will be visible across
parts of South America in 2019 and 2020. But the third eclipse of the mission, in 2024, will be the sequel to the 2017 Great American Solar Eclipse, crossing a swath of the U.S. stretching from Texas to Maine.
That year will also see the sun around its maximum activity level and the Parker Solar Probe's closest approach to the star. The probe will fly to within 4 million miles (6.4 million km) of what we consider the sun's surface. "2024 will be a pretty exciting time. There'll be a lot of things happening on the sun," Young said.
That year will also present an opportunity to build on the 2017 eclipse's success in coordinating observations from the ground. "Having an eclipse happen across such a populated area, the United States, it's not across a lot of water, so that allows us to line up telescopes along the path to make a lot of observations that we couldn't do normally," Young said. "That has allowed us to make these detailed observations from the ground, which we can then connect with what we're measuring in space." [
Photos: Coolest 2017 Solar Eclipse Signs and Celebrations]
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