Ulysses
Spacecraft Flies Over Sun’s North Pole
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Artist concept of Ulysses making a north polar pass.
Image
by NASA/JPL |
(NASA/JPL)
The Ulysses spacecraft is making a rare flyby of the
sun’s north
pole. Unlike any other spacecraft, Ulysses
is able to sample winds at the sun’s poles, which are difficult
to study from Earth.
Ulysses has flown over the sun’s poles three times before, in
1994-95, 2000-01 and 2007. Last week, solar physicists announced
the first indications of a new solar cycle. Visiting the pole
at this time may lead to new insights about solar activity.
"This is a wonderful opportunity to examine the sun’s north
pole within a transition of cycles," said Arik Posner, Ulysses
program scientist at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "We’ve
never done this before."
Many researchers believe the sun’s poles are central to the
11-year ebb and flow of solar activity. When sunspots break up,
their decaying magnetic fields are carried poleward by vast currents
of plasma. This makes the poles a sort of graveyard for sunspots.
Old magnetic fields sink beneath the polar surface 200,000 kilometers
deep (about 124,000 miles), all the way down to the sun’s inner
magnetic dynamo, which generates the solar magnetic field. There,
dynamo action amplifies the fields for use in future solar cycles.
"Just as Earth’s poles are crucial to studies of terrestrial
climate change, the sun’s poles may be crucial to studies of
the solar cycle," said Ed Smith, Ulysses project scientist
at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
Each previous flyby revealed something interesting and mysterious.
One puzzle has been the temperature of the sun’s poles. In the
previous solar cycle, the magnetic north pole was about 80,000
degrees Fahrenheit (more than 44,000 degrees Celsius), or 8 percent
cooler than the south. The current flyby may help solve this
puzzle because it comes less than a year after a similar south
pole flyby in Feb. 2007. Mission scientists will be able to compare
temperature measurements, north versus south, with hardly any
gap between them.
Ulysses also discovered the sun’s high-speed polar wind. At
the sun’s poles, the magnetic field opens up and allows solar
atmosphere to stream out at a million miles per hour. By flying
around the sun, covering all latitudes in a way that no other
spacecraft can, Ulysses has been able to monitor this polar wind
throughout the solar cycle and has found that it is acting a
bit odd.
"Twelve years ago, just before the previous ‘sea change’
between solar cycles, the polar wind spilled down almost all
the way to the sun’s equator. But this time it is not. The polar
wind is bottled up, confined to latitudes above 45 degrees, " said
Posner.
Launched in Oct. 1990 from the space shuttle Discovery, Ulysses
is a joint mission of NASA and the European Space Agency.