Thursday, October 4, 2018

Parker Solar Probe Completes 1st Venus Flyby Curving Path to Touch the Sun Soon!


Illustration of NASA’s Parker Solar Probe passing Venus on Oct. 3, 2018 at a distance of 1500 miles (2400 km) above the surface. Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL/Steve Gribben
Ken Kremer  --   SpaceUpClose.com  --   3 October 2018

KENNEDY SPACE CENTER, FL –  NASA’s Parker Solar Probe  completed its first flyby of the planet Venus early today, a critical maneuver that curved the spacecrafts path and slowed the speed sufficiently to fly by and ‘touch’ the sun very soon!

In early November, the $1 Billion NASA science probe will journey closer than any spacecraft in human history and carry out its mission to 'touch the sun.'

The car sized Parker successfully barreled past Venus at about 4:45 a.m. EDT Wednesday. Oct. 3 - barely 1500 miles (2400 km) above the surface.  

“Parker Solar Probe successfully completed its flyby of Venus at a distance of about 1,500 miles during the first Venus gravity assist of the mission,” NASA reported in a statement today. 
Parker Solar Probe completed its first flyby of Venus on Oct. 3, 2018, during a Venus gravity assist, where the spacecraft used the planet's gravity to alter its trajectory and bring it closer to the Sun.  Credits: NASA/JHUAPL
Wednesday’s flyby was the first of seven planned through the mission which is expected to last through 2024. 

“These gravity assists will help the spacecraft tighten its orbit closer and closer to the Sun over the course of the mission.”

The flyby also reduced Parker speed relative to the sun by about 7000 MPH and placed it on a trajectory 4 million miles closer. 

“On Oct. 3, 2018, Parker Solar Probe performed the first significant celestial maneuver of its seven-year mission. As the orbits of the spacecraft and Venus converged toward the same point, Parker Solar Probe slipped in front of the planet, allowing Venus' gravity — relatively small by celestial standards — to twist its path and change its speed.” 


“This maneuver reduced Parker's speed relative to the Sun by 10 percent — amounting to 7,000 miles per hour — drawing the closest point of its orbit, called perihelion, nearer to the star by 4 million miles.


Parker Solar Probe Mission Trajectory and Current Position after Venus flyby Oct 4, 2018.  Credit: NASA/APL/Parker Solar Probe
Mission scientists and engineers are now analyzing the data to confirm all went exactly as planned.

“Detailed data from the flyby will be assessed over the next few days. This data allows the flight operations team to prepare for the remaining six Venus gravity assists which will occur over the course of the seven-year mission.”

The team is also working 24/7 to checkout and calibrate the four on board science instruments.

The calibration and checkout data to date demonstrate that “each of the instruments is working well” says NASA.

For example, the ‘first light’ image below was captured by the WISPR instrument, short for the Wide-field Imager on Parker Solar Probe, on Sept. 9, 2018.

They must be on line before the 1st solar encounter period begins on Oct. 31 and lasts through Nov. 11.
These are the first images from WISPR, short for the Wide-field Imager for Parker Solar Probe taken on Sept. 9, 2018. Researchers studied the images to determine the instrument was pointed as expected, using celestial landmarks as their guide. The left image shows the Milky Way, looking at the galactic center. In the right image, there is a distinctive cluster of four stars near the right edge that is in the constellation Scorpius. The planet Jupiter is also visible in the right image as the bright object slightly right of center. The Sun, not visible in the image, is far off to the right of the image’s right edge.  Credits: NASA/Naval Research Laboratory/Parker Solar Probe

Closest approach to the Sun will occur on Nov. 5. 

In the meantime, it gets closer and closer!


On Oct. 29, Parker Solar Probe is slated to approach within 27 million miles (43 million km)  of the Sun- surpassing the current record held by the German American Helios 2 mission set in 1976.

On Oct. 30, the probe will “surpass a heliocentric speed of 153,454 miles per hour” according to NASA. 

“This is the record for fastest spacecraft measured relative to the Sun, set by Helios 2 in 1976.”

The mission began with a dazzling middle-of-the-night blastoff of the mighty Delta IV Heavy rocket in the wee hours of Sunday morning, Aug. 12 – and delivered the car sized spacecraft to its intended trajectory towards Venus and the Sun. 


The United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket launches NASA's Parker Solar Probe to touch the Sun and dive into the corona, Sunday, Aug. 12, 2018, at 3:31 a.m. EDT from Space Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida. From camera at pad. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com
The 23-story tall triple barreled United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket successfully launched at 3:31 a.m. EDT Aug. 12 from the Florida Space Coast and put on a brilliant display of fire power with 2.1 million pounds of thrust spewing forth from the trio of liquid oxygen/liquid hydrogen RS-68A main engines that quickly turned night into day a few hours before Sundays natural sunrise under nearly cloud-free skies.

Check out our Space UpClose gallery of photos and videos. Plus my BBC TV World News prelaunch interview. 

Here’s my Parker launch video from a remote camera set at pad 37:
Video Caption: Launch of NASA’s Parker Solar Probe on United Launch Alliance Delta IV Heavy rocket on Aug. 12, 2018, at 3:31 a.m. EDT from Launch Complex 37 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida on humanity’s 1st mission to our sun that will fly through the sun’s atmosphere or corona - as seen in this remote camera video taken at the pad. Credit: Ken Kremer/kenkremer.com/spaceupclose.com

Here’s my BBC TV World News Pre-Launch interview:


Watch for Ken’s continuing onsite coverage of NASA, SpaceX, ULA, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Orbital ATK and more space and mission reports direct from the Kennedy Space Center, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station, Florida and Wallops Flight Facility, Virginia.

Stay tuned here for Ken's continuing Earth and Planetary science and human spaceflight news: www.kenkremer.com –www.spaceupclose.com – twitter @ken_kremer – email: ken at kenkremer.com

Dr. Kremer is a research scientist and journalist based in the KSC area

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Ken’s photos are for sale and he is available for lectures and outreach events


The orbit design for the Parker Solar Probe mission illustrating the trajectory through the inner solar system following Aug. 12, 2018 launch from Cape Canaveral, FL.  Credit: NASA/Johns Hopkins APL


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