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New X-ray spacecraft launched
By Diane Ainsworth, Public Affairs
06 February 2002
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Whoops of joy and applause erupted in the halls of Berkeley’s Space Sciences Laboratory multimedia conference room at 12:58 p.m. on Feb. 5, as the long-awaited High Energy Solar Spectroscopic Imager (HESSI) was air-launched from a L-1011 jetliner and blasted into space 40,000 feet over the Atlantic Ocean. In keeping with the satellite’s record of delays to date, the first launch attempt was aborted two minutes and seven seconds before HESSI’s scheduled drop from the belly of the commercial airplane, keeping the science and operations team in limbo for an additional 30 minutes. Communications problems prompted the action. After looping around and returning to the launch location, HESSI was dropped from the sky and blasted into orbit by its Pegasus booster. “It was fabulous, my virgin launch,” said an elated Beth Burnside, vice chancellor of research, who watched the televised launch from the Space Sciences Laboratory. “Terrific,” said Robert Lin, director of the lab and HESSI’s principal investigator. “We couldn’t have asked for a better launch.” The launch came just six days after another Berke-ley/NASA satellite — the Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer — re-entered Earth’s atmosphere, ending an eight-year mission to explore space in the extreme ultraviolet, a portion of the electromagnetic spectrum never before studied. Studying solar flares HESSI is the first NASA mission in more than a quarter of a century to be designed, built and operated by a university and its partners. NASA made that decision as a way to lower the cost of the mission, which is estimated to be $85 million, said Peter Harvey, HESSI project manager. Manfred Bester, HESSI mission operations scientist, designed the lab’s 36-foot-diameter antenna dish, which will send commands to the four-winged spacecraft as it passes over Berkeley six times a day. “What a perfect flight,” he exclaimed as a fax from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center, with the coordinates of the newly orbiting spacecraft, arrived. Faster than a speeding bullet HESSI’s X-ray and gamma- ray vision will allow it to take snapshots of solar flares and “see inside of a solar flare,” Lin said. These flares are seen in visible light as the sudden and intense brightenings of the sun’s surface near sunspots. Scientists believe solar flares release as much energy as a billion megatons of TNT, but nobody knows how the sun is able to release this much energy or why up to half of the energy that is released is in the form of high-energy particles. Sister satellite reenters atmosphere The ultraviolet probe went off line in the operations center nearly a week before HESSI spread its wings. Shutdown of operations freed Berkeley operations engineers to begin tracking HESSI and preparing for another launch in late 2002.
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