Launching Balloons to Study Space Weather
In
Antarctica in January, 2013 – the summer at the South Pole – scientists
released 20 balloons, each eight stories tall, into the air to help
answer an enduring space weather question: when the giant radiation
belts surrounding Earth lose material, where do the extra particles
actually go?
This NASA-funded mission is called BARREL, for
Balloon Array for Radiation belt Relativistic Electron Losses. Each
balloon launched by the BARREL team floated for anywhere from three to
40 days, measuring X-rays produced by fast-moving electrons high up in
the atmosphere.
BARREL works hand in hand with another NASA
mission called the Van Allen Probes, which travels directly through the
Van Allen radiation belts. The belts wax and wane over time in response
to incoming energy and material from the sun, sometimes intensifying the
radiation through which satellites orbiting Earth must travel.
Scientists need to understand this process better, and even provide
forecasts of such space weather, in order to protect our spacecraft.
› Read MoreImage Credit: NASA
NASA
Guillermo Gonzalo Sánchez Achutegui
ayabaca@gmail.com
ayabaca@hotmail.com
ayabaca@yahoo.com
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