February 17, 2007
NASA's THEMIS mission successfully
launched Saturday, Feb. 17, at 6:01 p.m. EST from Pad 17-B at Cape
Canaveral
Air Force Station,
THEMIS stands for the Time History of Events and Macroscale
Interactions during
Substorms. It is NASA's first five-satellite mission launched aboard a
single
rocket. The spacecraft separated from the launch vehicle approximately
73
minutes after liftoff. By 8:07 p.m. EST, mission operators at the
The mission will help resolve the mystery of what triggers geomagnetic
substorms. Substorms are atmospheric events visible in the Northern
Hemisphere
as a sudden brightening of the Northern Lights, or aurora borealis. The
findings from the mission may help protect commercial satellites and
humans in
space from the adverse effects of particle radiation.
THEMIS' satellite constellation will line up along the sun-Earth line,
collect coordinated
measurements, and observe substorms during the two-year mission. Data
collected
from the five identical probes will help pinpoint where and when
substorms
begin, a feat impossible with any previous single-satellite mission.
"The THEMIS mission will make a breakthrough in our understanding of
how
Earth's magnetosphere stores and releases energy from the sun and also
will
demonstrate the tremendous potential that constellation missions have
for space
exploration," said Vassilis Angelopoulos, THEMIS principal investigator
at
the
The
During the mission the five THEMIS satellites will observe an estimated
30
substorms in process. At the same time, 20 ground observatories in
"I am proud to manage the fifth medium class mission of the Explorer
Program," said Willis S. Jenkins, the THEMIS program executive. "As
we seek the answer to a compelling scientific question in geospace
physics, we
are keeping up the tradition that began with Explorer I."
NASA's Launch Services Program at the
For additional information about THEMIS, news media should contact
Cynthia
O'Carroll,
The Explorer Program Office at Goddard manages the NASA-funded THEMIS
mission.
The Space Sciences Laboratory at the
For
more information and images,
visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/themis/main/index.html
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/kennedy/news/releases/2007/release-20070217.html
##
Contact:
Dwayne Brown
NASA Headquarters
202-358-1726
dwayne.c.brown@nasa.gov
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/kennedy/news/releases/2007/release-20070217.html