Today in the history of astronomy, Yulis Solar investigation becomes close with the Sun.
NASA-ESA was the first craft to study solar poles and map Heliosfare, Yulisis (seen in this artist’s interpretation). Credit: ESA/NASA
- Ulysses Solar Probe, a joint NASA-ESA mission, rode on space shuttle in 1990 Search,
- The primary objectives of Ulysses included studying solar air, maping heliosfare and operating detailed comments of the sun’s poles.
- The instrumentation of the investigation included a diverse range of sensors measuring various solar and cosmic phenomena, including magnetic fields, plasma, particles, and radiation.
- In its 18-year operating lifetime, Ulysses completed approximately three solar classes, which builds the first three-dimensional map of heliosfare and provides novel data on solar wind mobility and polar characteristics.
A joint NASA-ESA Mission, ULISIS Solar Investigation launched Space Shuttle on 6 October 1990 SearchThe mission was assigned to study solar air, mapping of heliosfare and to study solar poles and to chart in detail. Radio waves, plasma waves, solar particles, gravitational waves, cosmic dust, gamma rays, X-rays, and more are equipped with a magnetometer, ion composition gauge, and equipment to measure more, which was built in about three full orbits of the Sun in 18-Place years. Its heliosentric orbit was specificly designed to move over the Sun’s pole, and on September 13, 1994, the investigation made its closed approach to the solar South Pole. When the mission concluded on June 30, 2009, Yulis created the first 3D map of the heliosfare, charts solar air speed and behavior, and exposed new details about the sun’s pole and magnetic field.