Solar Week - Ask a Question



Come here during Solar Week (next one: March 22-26, 2021) to interact. To post a question, click on your area of interest from the topics below, and then click on the "Ask New Question" button. Or EMAIL or tweet or plant in Answer Garden your question about the Sun or life as a scientist to us -- and watch for it to appear here.  You can also visit our FAQs (frequently asked questions). In between Solar Weeks in October and March, you can view all the archives here.

PrevPrev Go to previous topic
NextNext Go to next topic
Last Post 10/23/2019 6:39 AM by  Terry Kucera
How close can we go to the sun?
 1 Replies
Sort:
You are not authorized to post a reply.
Author Messages

Anonymous





Posts:


--
10/22/2019 5:42 PM
    [from AnswerGarden]

    How close can we go to the sun?
    Tags: sun

    Terry Kucera



    Basic Member


    Posts:328
    Basic Member


    --
    10/23/2019 6:39 AM
    Well, right now we are trying to figure that out. NASA's Parker Solar Probe Spacecraft is currently orbiting closer and closer to the Sun. It recently completed its 3rd pass close to the Sun at 15 million miles away from its surface. The plan is for it to get close and closer until it swoops by less than 5 million miles from the surface. 5 million miles might seem like a lot, but it is much closer than we are - Earth is about 93 million miles from the Sun, and the closest planet to the Sun, Mercury, is about 36 million miles away. Parker is specially designed to handle the immense radiation form the Sun and still return useful data from this region of the Solar System we have never visited before. It is very tricky, though, and the Parker team is closely monitoring the spacecraft to keep it safe and healthy.
    Here are some Parker Solar Probe links:
    parkersolarprobe.jhuapl.edu/
    https://blogs.nasa.gov/parkersolarprobe/

    Another interesting measure of how close something can get to the sun and survive is Comet Lovejoy. In 2011 this comet passed about 75,000 miles from the solar surface and came back out again. It was amazing - most comets that get that close evaporate.
    https://science.nasa.gov/.../16dec_cometlovejoy/

    Of course I would not want to be a human being on Comet Lovejoy or even Parker Solar Probe. Designing something that could get a human safely that close to the Sun would be an entirely different kettle of fish!

    Terry


    You are not authorized to post a reply.


    Twitter Feed

    Scientist Leaderboard

    Name # of replies
    Multiverse skin is based on Greytness by Adammer