1 / 29

IMAGE

Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration. IMAGE. Senior Review Presentation July 9, 2001 Reprise for Yosemite February 8, 2002. pre-1981. 1981 (DE-1/SAI). J. L. Burch, Principal Investigator (SwRI) T. E. Moore, Project Scientist (NASA/GSFC)

posy
Download Presentation

IMAGE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration IMAGE Senior Review Presentation July 9, 2001 Reprise for Yosemite February 8, 2002 pre-1981 1981 (DE-1/SAI) J. L. Burch, Principal Investigator (SwRI) T. E. Moore, Project Scientist (NASA/GSFC) P. H. Reiff, Co-Investigator (Rice Univ.) 2000 (IMAGE/EUV) “The real voyage of discovery consists not in seeking new landscapes, but in having new eyes.” - M. Proust

  2. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Purpose of the Senior Review: Allocate scarce MO&DA resources for missions. Strong impetus to turn off missions whose additional science is not as cost-effective Winners: IMAGE, Cluster Loser: IMP-J

  3. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 The extended IMAGE mission focuses on geomagnetic activity during the declining phase of the solar cycle. The evolution of the IMAGE orbit provides a new, mid- and low-latitude and ultimately southern hemisphere viewing perspective.

  4. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 The sunspot cycle has passed a double peak, and the magnetic field flip. It should be on its way down now. But CIR storms and major storms can still occur (like Aug 1972)

  5. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Prime Mission (2000-2002) Extended Mission (2002-2005) • solar maximum • declining phase of the solar cycle • high-latitude, northern hemisphere viewing • mid- & low-latitude, southern hemisphere viewing (e.g. plasmasphere refilling, RC pitch angle hanges)

  6. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Extended Mission (2005) Perigee over the Northern hemisphere Allows good correlation With ground-based instrumentation And VLF propagation Experiments; excellent aspect for ENA imaging •

  7. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Specific studies to be undertaken during the new mission include: Solar Cycle Dependence of Ionospheric Outflow Magnetic Field-aligned Plasma Dynamics Dynamics and Structural Changes in the Magnetopause and Cusp Cusp Plasma Injection Field-aligned Densities and the Closed Field Line Length over Substorm Time Scales Ring Current Pitch Angle Distributions; storm dynamics Substorms versus storms; convection jets and eddies Plasmasphere Refilling Dynamics High-resolution Ionospheric Imaging Most of these studies are made possible by the new viewing perspective that results from the precession of the IMAGE orbit to middle and low latitudes. Open data policy encourages collaborations with other missions and new initiatives from non-team members (Guest Investigators and others).

  8. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Geomagnetic Activity at Solar Max vs. during Declining Phase of the Solar Cycle How does the inner magnetosphere respond to CIRs? How does a cooler exosphere affect polar ion outflow? Bastille Day Storm, 15-18 July 2000

  9. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Examples of New Science Results Since Proposal Submission

  10. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE provides first global look at substorm tail dynamics. Sun contamination Dipolarization and injections reach geosynchronous. Auroral onset. Injection complete Stretched tail field. Dense plasmasheet Ions drift earthward in dipolarization E-field faster than they can be replenished from tail convection field Flux increase due to conservation of adiabatic invariance

  11. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE/RPI’s ability to observe ducted echoes makes possible the determination of field-aligned densities and field-line length and topology, including refilling after drainage.

  12. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE discovers source of kilometric continuum radiation. EUV imager observes previously unknown “bite outs” in plasmasphere. RPI demonstrates that kilometric continuum is generated deep within bite outs and is beamed along magnetic equator from a confined source region.

  13. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE sounds the magnetopause - putting “M” into IMAGE. . RPI observes the magnetopause echoes (getting farther away) while the plasmapause echoes become closer.

  14. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMF Dependence of Subauroral Proton Emissions: the “Q” Aurora

  15. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 In addition to its investigation of the geospace environment, IMAGE will continue to exploit LENA’s unique capability to observe solar wind and interstellar neutrals. Specifically, IMAGE will: Study seasonal and solar cycle variations in solar wind neutral flux Search for ENAs formed by charge exchange between solar wind ions and interstellar neutrals, and as interaction between the solar wind and exosphere - magnetosheath! Determine the angular width and start and stop dates of the interstellar neutral signal observed between late December and early February Although primarily a magnetospheric mission, IMAGE contributes to understanding of how the Sun and the galaxy interact (Quest III, SEC Roadmap 2000).

  16. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE detects solar wind and interstellar neutrals.

  17. Seasonal variation of solar wind neutral atoms as probe of gas and dust in the inner heliosphere Theory: Hydrogen Flux at Earth Theory: Years after Solar Maximum

  18. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 New Questions, areas of research: PMEC: polarization fields making major changes in ENA location, localized E-fields make biteouts or shoulders Q-aurora: low-altitude evidence of plasma tail, drainage plume? DUCTS: Evidence of wrapped-up plasma tails?? CUSP ACCELERATED IONS: need to nail that down ANTIPARALLEL RECONNECTION: how resolve the IMAGE results with other low latitude results that look more like component merging? RING CURRENT/Plasmasphere interactions

  19. And many many many more exciting results that have been presented in this meeting!! Years after Solar Maximum

  20. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE provides real-time auroral imaging to the NOAA Space Environment Center.* http://www.sec.noaa.gov/IMAGE/ Given the importance of the plasma drainage tail, Maybe we should also have EUV data realtime! (Foster’s report this meeting) *IMAGE will provide critical extended auroral imaging that Polar will lose once its fuel is depleted.

  21. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 The IMAGE / POETRY team will continue its highly successful education and outreach activities... Development and distribution of IMAGE-based educational materials Participation in teacher workshops; formal collaboration with Earth & Space Science Magnet School in Houston Participation in museum and planetarium programs Communication of exciting results to public via popular press and Web …with particular emphasis on: Influencing the treatment of aurora and the geospace environment in both undergraduate astronomy textbooks and K-12 science books adopted by county and state curriculum committees

  22. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 The IMAGE / POETRY team will continue its highly successful education and outreach activities... • Working with GSFC Education Office to design a Nation’s Space Science Education Matrix to implement systemic change in space science education • NASA Connect program on SEC missions, to feature IMAGE (3/2002). • 'Invisible Earth Systems' poster which integrates POETRY activities and national standards in the topic area of systems science. • Space Weather planetarium show at Adler Planetarium, April 2002 • Distribution of revised undergraduate textbooks...sample page • More propagation to ground experiments with INSPIRE • POETRY web site upgrades • Continue to advertise our resources to educators (NSTA, etc.)

  23. IMAGE Mission Stars in NASA/CONNECT TV Program DATA ANALYSIS AND MEASUREMENT: Having a Solar Blast! Starts airing: Thursday, March 28, 2002, 11 am ET Runtime: 28:30 NASA engineers and researchers use data analysis and measurement to predict solar storms, anticipate how they will affect the Earth, and improve our understanding of the Sun-Earth system. Mathematics: data analysis, measurement Science: science as inquiry, unifying concepts and processes, physical science, Earth and space science, science and technology, science in personal and social perspectives. NASA Research: SOlar Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO), Imager for Magnetopause-to-Aurora Global Exploration (IMAGE) Dr. Sten Odenwald (IMAGE/POETRY) is the on-camera scientist who works with Hosts to explain IMAGE mission and the importance of space weather research. The Script breakdown is: IMAGE Mission……850 words SOHO Mission….….300 words ACE Mission……….150 words National Reach: 380,000 teachers subscribe to CONNECT 2.8 million students watch the program 10 episodes per year.

  24. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 Like the prime mission, the IMAGE extended mission addresses key NASA goals and objectives set forth in the Space Science Enterprise Strategic Plan and the SEC Roadmap.

  25. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 The IMAGE extended mission advances our efforts to: • learn how galaxies, stars, and planets form, interact, and evolve • understand our changing Sun and its effects throughout the solar system • develop the knowledge to improve our under- standing of space weather • share the excitement and knowledge generated by scientific discovery and improve science education

  26. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 IMAGE Makes Critical Contributions to the OSS Strategic Plan GoalObjectiveIMAGE Contribution Image s.w.-mag. Interactions. Find long-term variation of ISNs. Search for ISNs from termination shock. Learn how galaxies, stars, and planets form, interact, and evolve. Understand our changing Sun and its effects throughout the Solar System. Chart the evolution of the Universe from origins to destiny and understand its galaxies, stars, planets, and life. Share the excitement and know- ledge generated by scientific discovery and improve science education. Use robotic science missions as forerunners to human exploration beyond low-Earth orbit. Develop new technologies to enable innovative and less expensive research and flight missions. Compare CME and CIR storms Share the excitement of space science discoveries with the public. Enhance the quality of science, math, and technology education, particularly at the pre-college level. Help create 21st century workforce. Popular articles, museum and planetarium exhibits Teacher workshops, pre-college and college curriculum development Undergraduate and graduate research opportunities Develop the knowledge to improve space weather. Nearly continuous multi-spectral imaging of geospace Real-time data link for NOAA Acquire new technical approaches and capabilities. Validate new technologies in space. Apply and transfer technology. Comprehensive set of new magnetospheric imaging technologies developed, validated in space, and published.

  27. IMAGE Senior Review Presentation • July 9, 2001 The IMAGE extended mission addresses three of the four fundamental quests set forth in the 2000 SEC Roadmap. Quest II. How do the planets respond to solar variations? IMAGE provides nearly continuous global imaging of the solar-wind magnetosphere interaction at solar maximum and, during an extended mission, during the declining phase. Quest III. How do the Sun and galaxy interact? IMAGE obtains measurements of interstellar neutrals and is conducting a search for neutral atoms produced at the termination shock. Quest IV. How does solar variability affect life and society? As the first space weather satellite, IMAGE provides the only global monitor of space weather. And the IMAGE extended mission offers an effective and imaginative approach to the SEC E/PO goals described in the Roadmap.

  28. Keep up the good work!!

More Related