Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T21:22:45.151Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Joint Discussion 6: Sun and Heliosphere - Challenges for Solar-Terrestrial Physics, Magneto-and Hydrodynamics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2016

Martin C.E. Huber
Affiliation:
ESA, Space Science Department, ESTEC, Postbus 299, NL-2200 AG Noordwijk, The Netherlands
Arne Pedersen
Affiliation:
ESA, Space Science Department, ESTEC, Postbus 299, NL-2200 AG Noordwijk, The Netherlands
Claus Fröhlich
Affiliation:
Physikalisch-Meteorologisches Observatorium Davos, World Radiation Centre, Dorfstrasse 33, CH-7260 Davos-Dorf, Switzerland

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

There is one astrophysical system, where the sites of a star’s mass loss can be localised and observed in detail, and where the behaviour of the resulting stellar wind in the star’s environment and around orbiting obstacles can be investigated in situ: it is the Sun, the heliosphere and the surroundings of planets — among the latter most prominently the terrestrial magnetosphere. Indeed, within a year or so a fleet of satellites equipped with sophisticated remote-sensing and in-situ instruments will make this astronomical paradigm, or more precisely, the solar-terrestrial system accessible to intensive, multi-disciplinary study.

Four identical CLUSTER spacecraft, orbiting the Earth within the magnetosphere, the surrounding space and the particularly interesting plasma boundary layers will perform a three-dimensional in-situ study of plasma-heating, particle-acceleration and other small-scale plasma processes (Schmidt and Goldstein,1988). A number of other missions — some of them already in orbit, like GEOTAIL and WIND, some to be launched within one or two years, like INTERBALL and POLAR — will provide information about the Earth’s magnetosphere and the solar wind on larger spatial scales. These missions are described in a Brochure issued jointly by the European Space Agency, NASA, the Japanese Institute of Space and Astronomical Science and the Rssian Space Agency, which can be obtained from A. Pedersen at the above address.

Type
II. Joint Discussions
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1995

References

Culhane, J.L. 1994, pp. 1728 in Marsden (1994).Google Scholar
Domingo, V. and Poland, A. (eds.) 1988, The SOHO Mission - Scientific and Technical Aspects of the Instruments, ESA SP-1104 (Paris: European Space Agency).Google Scholar
Marsden, R.M. (ed.) 1994, The High-Latitutude Heliosphere (Proc. of the 27th ESLAB Symposium, Friedrichshafen, 19 - 21 April 1994), (Dordrecht: Kluwer); also reprinted in Space Sci. Rev. 72, Nos. 1-2, 1995.Google Scholar
Schmidt, R. and Goldstein, M.L. (eds.) 1988, The Cluster Mission - Scientific and Technical Aspects of the Instruments, ESA SP-1103 (Paris: European Space Agency).Google Scholar
Woerden van, H. (ed.) 1994, Astronomy Posters - Abstracts (Sliedrecht/NL: Twin Press), pp. 206213.Google Scholar