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Ulysses, fifteen years and going strong (Forwarded)



 
 
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Old October 6th 05, 09:59 PM
Andrew Yee
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Default Ulysses, fifteen years and going strong (Forwarded)

ESA News
http://www.esa.int

6 October 2005

Ulysses, fifteen years and going strong

Fifteen years after its launch, the grand ESA/NASA Ulysses space mission
is still going strong, orbiting the Sun and continuing to tell exciting
stories about our nearest star.

Carried into space on 6 October 1990 by the Space Shuttle Discovery, the
European-built Ulysses spacecraft has already travelled an amazing seven
thousand million kilometres.

During this voyage of exploration, Ulysses has literally opened new
windows on the heliosphere, that vast region of space carved out by the
Sun, which expands well beyond the limits of the Solar System itself.

Pacing itself over six-year long orbits, Ulysses is the first spacecraft
to be placed in a polar orbit around the Sun.

From this unique 'out-of-the-ecliptic' vantage point, covering all
solar latitudes, Ulysses is studying in situ previously unexplored
regions of space, such as those above the Sun's poles.

Ulysses carries a set of sophisticated scientific instruments, several
of which are of a type that had never flown in space before.

These have enabled scientists to make many ground-breaking discoveries,
some in areas that were not even imagined when this visionary solar
mission was first planned in the 1970s.

Ulysses is providing the first four-dimensional survey (three spatial
dimensions and time) of the 'solar wind', the constant flow of charged
particles ejected by the Sun and filling the whole of space around us.

Thanks to these data, scientists could not only deduce unique
information about the source of the solar wind, but also they could
learn about the Solar System environment itself.

For example, Ulysses is providing new and exciting insights into
phenomena such as the way the Sun's magnetic field reverses polarity. It
is exploring the nature of cosmic rays, the boundary of the heliosphere
and the interstellar medium, and even the constraints on fundamental
cosmological concepts like the evolution of matter in the Universe.

In February 2004, ESA's Science Programme Committee approved the Ulysses
mission extension until March 2008. With this, Ulysses will be the only
mission to observe the heliosphere in three dimensions over a large
fraction of the Sun's 22-year magnetic cycle.

Happy birthday, Ulysses!

For more information:

Richard Marsden, ESA Ulysses Project Scientist
E-mail: richard.marsden @ esa.int

Ulysses findings and science are being discussed in October 2005 at the
54th Ulysses Science Working Team meeting taking place in Pasadena, USA.

More about...

* Ulysses overview
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/120395_index_0_m.html

Related articles

* Solar magnetism: a simple or complex business?
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMXXD5Y3EE_index_0.html
* A piece of our Galaxy in our backyard
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMCKE5Y3EE_index_0.html
* Particles and comet tails ...
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMDBG5Y3EE_index_0.html
* Ulysses: looking at the future
http://www.esa.int/esaSC/SEMSME5Y3EE_index_0.html

Related links

* NASA's Ulysses web site
http://ulysses.jpl.nasa.gov/

[NOTE: Images supporting this release are available at
http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMTNC5Y3EE_index_1.html ]
 




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