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  • - NASA is about to go where no one has gone before: the sun.

  • That's right, NASA is flying a $1.5-billion spacecraft

  • into the hottest, most violent object in our solar system,

  • all in the name of science.

  • (soaring orchestral music)

  • NASA's unmanned Parker Solar Probe

  • will come within 3.83 million miles of the solar surface.

  • Now, that doesn't sound very close,

  • but it's about seven times closer

  • than any spacecraft has ever gone before

  • and it puts the probe smack inside

  • one of the sun's most treacherous layers: the corona,

  • the outermost layer of the sun.

  • Here, the temperatures fluctuate

  • from one to five million degrees Fahrenheit

  • and solar flares exist that are so big,

  • they could swallow our planet whole.

  • So, why are we going here again?

  • It turns out the sun poses a major threat

  • to our modern way of life.

  • Powerful magnetic fields form near the sun's surface,

  • where they sometimes spark violent eruptions,

  • called coronal mass ejections.

  • These ejections fire a surge of highly-charged particles

  • into space that will fry any electronic circuits on impact.

  • That includes circuits inside our satellites

  • that control cell service, the internet,

  • GPS, the stock exchange, and much, much more.

  • In 2014, for example, astrophysicist Daniel N. Baker

  • explained what may happen

  • if one of these powerful storms hit Earth directly,

  • explaining it "could cause widespread power blackouts,

  • disabling everything that plugs into a wall socket.

  • Most people wouldn't even be able to flush their toilet

  • because urban water supplies largely rely on electric pumps."

  • Such a strike could cost an estimated $2 trillion in damage,

  • 10 times more than Hurricane Katrina.

  • Now, luckily, space is a big place,

  • which makes Earth a relatively small and tricky target.

  • In fact, the last time a powerful storm like this

  • struck our planet was more than 150 years ago, back in 1859.

  • But the risk is there,

  • and NASA predicts there's a 12% chance

  • we could get hit within the next decade.

  • That's where the Parker Solar Probe comes in.

  • The probe can't prevent an ejection from happening,

  • but it can study the corona so that we may better understand

  • the warning signs of an impending storm.

  • And with enough notice,

  • we may be able to protect our satellites from harm.

  • In addition to spying on the sun,

  • Parker Solar Probe has another very important job:

  • don't melt.

  • To that end, NASA has prepped the probe

  • with four highly-tuned sensors and an impressive heat shield

  • that will protect the probe's instruments.

  • The sensors are there to make sure

  • the shield stays directed at the sun at all times.

  • The mission will involve not one or two,

  • but 24 dives into the sun,

  • which are all scheduled to take place through the year 2025.

- NASA is about to go where no one has gone before: the sun.

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NASAは初めて太陽の中に宇宙船を飛ばしている (NASA Is Flying A Spacecraft Into The Sun For The First Time)

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    鐘燕華 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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