Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Space
  3. Emerging Tech
  4. News

Solar Orbiter blasts off on mission to discover the secrets of the sun

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

The Solar Orbiter is on its way to the sun. The spacecraft got off to a perfect start late Sunday night, with a flawless launch aboard an Atlas V 411 rocket from Cape Canaveral, Florida, at 11.03 p.m. ET.

Solar Orbiter liftoff

The ambitious mission, jointly operated by the European Space Agency (ESA) and NASA, should give us the best view yet of our star, including the first proper look at its uncharted polar regions.

Recommended Videos

Shortly after the Atlas rocket delivered the Solar Orbiter to space, ESA was able to confirm that the spacecraft’s all-important solar array had properly deployed, supplying it with power.

The $672 million Solar Orbiter, which is kitted out with a suite of highly sensitive instruments for imaging the surface of the sun and measuring the properties of the nearby environment, will take almost two years to reach its initial operational orbit in a mission that could last up to a decade.

“As humans, we have always been familiar with the importance of the sun to life on Earth, observing it and investigating how it works in detail, but we have also long known it has the potential to disrupt everyday life should we be in the firing line of a powerful solar storm,” said Günther Hasinger, ESA Director of Science. “By the end of our Solar Orbiter mission, we will know more about the hidden force responsible for the sun’s changing behavior and its influence on our home planet than ever before.”

Thomas Zurbuchen, NASA’s associate administrator for Science at the agency’s headquarters in Washington DC, promised the Solar Orbiter would do “amazing things” during its mission. “Combined with the other recently launched NASA missions to study the sun, we are gaining unprecedented new knowledge about our star,” Zurbuchen said. He added that data from the mission will also help make astronauts safer as they travel on upcoming Artemis missions to the moon and beyond.

For more on the Solar Orbiter and the aims of the mission, be sure to check out this informative piece that has everything you need to know.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Orbot Robotics’ space robot has four arms, but its Goro physique has a purpose
This four-armed robot could make routine space-station work easier for astronauts
Robot with four arms

Helios is a new four-armed robot from Zurich-based Orbit Robotics, and at first glance, it reminded me of Goro from Mortal Kombat. But unlike the prince from Outworld, Helios is not built for combat. It is designed to help astronauts on space stations with the repetitive, time-consuming work that keeps life in space running.

Orbit Robotics says that in microgravity, legs are not much help. Instead of walking or standing, Helios needs to move through tight station interiors, hold itself steady, and handle cargo, tools, or equipment. Its four-arm design turns extra limbs into both mobility aids and working hands.

Read more
A billionaire crypto bro will lead humanity to Mars atop Musk’s Starship
Chun Wang could become one of the first humans to travel toward Mars
Chun Wang in a space suit

Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin became the faces of the Moon landing era. Elon Musk’s Mars era may get a very different public face in Chun Wang, a cryptocurrency billionaire whose fortune traces back to Bitcoin mining.

Wang is expected to lead a future SpaceX Starship mission that would fly past Mars and return to Earth. SpaceX has not announced a launch date, and the plan still depends on Starship proving it can safely carry humans far beyond Earth's orbit.

Read more
Elon Musk will get a historical paycheck if he builds a colony of one milliion humans on Mars
SpaceX may hand Musk a historic payday, if Mars becomes a city
Elon Musk talks to the press as he arrives to to have a look at the construction site of the new Tesla Gigafactory near Berlin.

An executive's pay packages are typically tied to review, profit, share price, or operational targets. But SpaceX apparently has something different in mind. According to a Bloomberg report and details from SpaceX's IPO filing, Elon Musk's latest compensation plan includes a wild condition.

The company must establish a permanent human colony on Mars with at least 1 million inhabitants. However, this is only a part of the crazy deal.

Read more