Two New Nasa Rockets to Study Earth's Magnetic Field

Advertisement
By Indo-Asian News Service | Updated: 25 November 2015 18:46 IST
The US space agency is planning to launch two sounding rockets over Norway this winter to study how particles move in a region near the North Pole where Earth's magnetic field is directly connected to the solar wind.

After the launch window opens on November 27, the CAPER and RENU 2 rockets will have to wait for low winds and a day-time aurora before they can send their instrument payloads soaring through the Northern Lights, the US space agency said in a statement.

Both instrument packages are studying cusp aurora, a particular subset of the Northern Lights in which energetic particles are accelerated downward into the atmosphere directly from the solar wind - that is, the constant outward flow of solar material from the sun.

Though cusp auroras are not particularly rare, they are often difficult to spot because they only happen during the day.

Advertisement

"The magnetic pole is tilted towards North America, putting this magnetic opening - the cusp - at a higher latitude on the European side," said Jim LaBelle, principal investigator on the CAPER rocket at Dartmouth College in New Hampshire.

Advertisement

The two sounding rocket teams will also employ data from ground-based radars to detect the cusp aurora even in the case of clouds.

CAPER, short for Cusp Alfven and Plasma Electrodynamics Rocket, will be first in the queue to launch.

Advertisement

CAPER is investigating the electromagnetic, or EM, waves that can accelerate electrons down into Earth's atmosphere or up out to space.

The other sounding rocket is the second iteration of the Rocket Experiment for Neutral Upwelling or RENU 2.

Advertisement

It will study the relationship between the inflow of electrons that creates the cusp aurora, electric currents flowing along magnetic field lines and dense columns of heated neutral atoms in the upper atmosphere.

Though CAPER and RENU 2 will collect data for only a few minutes each, suborbital sounding rockets are a valuable way to study space and the upper atmosphere at relatively low cost, the statement read.

 

For the latest tech news and reviews, follow Gadgets 360 on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News. For the latest videos on gadgets and tech, subscribe to our YouTube channel. If you want to know everything about top influencers, follow our in-house Who'sThat360 on Instagram and YouTube.

Further reading: Earth, Nasa, Space
Advertisement

Related Stories

Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Amazon Great Indian Festival Sale: Deals on Smartphones, Laptops Teased
  2. Google Pixel 10a Tipped to Come With Last Year's Tensor Chip
  3. Killing Satoshi Starring Casey Affleck, Pete Davidson to Release in 2026
  4. Hidden Reason Behind Portugal's Deadly Earthquakes Finally Explained
  1. BCCI Says Crypto, Real Money Gaming Platforms Can’t Bid for Team India’s Title Sponsorship
  2. Scientists Discover Hidden Mantle Layer Beneath the Himalayas Challenging Century-Old Theory
  3. Astronomers Propose Rectangular Telescope to Hunt Earth-Like Planets
  4. Microsoft Testing Native Clipboard Sync Feature to Share Text Between Windows PCs, Android Devices
  5. Su From So OTT Release: When and Where to Watch This Kannada-Language Horror-Comedy Online
  6. Sennheiser Momentum 4 Wireless 80th Anniversary Edition Launched in India With Up to 60 Hour Battery Life
  7. Call of Duty Film Adaption Said to Be a 'Priority' at Paramount, Negotiations on to Acquire Rights
  8. Cannibal Solar Storm May Trigger Auroras as Powerful Geomagnetic Storm to Hit Earth Soon
  9. Apple's iPhone 8 Plus Listed as Vintage Product Ahead of iPhone 17 Launch, 11-Inch MacBook Air Now Obsolete
  10. Hidden Reason Behind Portugal’s Deadly Earthquakes Finally Explained
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.