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Space Weather Forecasters Can Count on Jupiter

Abhishek writes "Space.com reports that forecasters who predict the Solar weather can rely on Jupiter now to help them see the part of the sun that is not visible due to Earth's rotation and revolution and sun's rotation along its own axis. Scientists observing the X-Ray emanating from the Jovian atmosphere theorised that those coming from the equator were related to solar activity but it is definitely not a perfect mirror; only one in every few thousand X-Ray photons get reflected. But even that is very useful in predicting the solar weather. 'We found that Jupiter's day-to-day disk X-rays were synchronized with the Sun's emissions,' said Anil Bhardwaj at NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, who led a new study using data from the European Space Agency's XMM-Newton telescope. Their work was detailed in Geophysical Research Letters."

3 of 23 comments (clear)

  1. Re:For Half of the Time, Anyway by CheshireCatCO · · Score: 2, Informative

    Obviously you could do that. But you don't get a lot of improvement in data quality by getting closer to the Sun (it's pretty well-resolved from here) and it's more expensive. Which is why I suggested one in the same orbit, not because that was the only option.

  2. Re:For Half of the Time, Anyway by Bad+D.N.A. · · Score: 3, Informative

    We have done it, and we will do it again. A while back ESA launched the two HELIOS probes into orbits getting as close as ~ 0.3 AU. Excellent missions and a lot of very important data was obtained. There are numerous proposals in the works to launch spacecraft well within the Earth's orbit. The main post was a space-weather related issue and from that perspective 1 AU is fine. But if you really want to understand the physics going in you have to get in there and measure it.

    --
    "Truth is much too complicated to allow anything but approximations"
  3. Re:For Half of the Time, Anyway by myukew · · Score: 2, Informative

    ah, wait... I already replied to this but...
    isn't it quite hard to get something on the same orbit as earth is but on the other side of the sun?
    One would either need to slow the spacecraft down so that it ends up on the other side but that'd mean you'd need to constantly run some kind of propulsion to prevent it from crashing into the sun.
    Or you could just send it to the opposite side and somehow manage to get it into a stable orbit.

    IANSpaceCraftEngineer but to me both ways seem rather pricey in terms of fuel usage