Solar Orbiter - NASA Animations
Solar Orbiter is an international cooperative mission between the European Space Agency and NASA that addresses a central question of heliophysics: How does the Sun create and control the constantly changing space environment throughout the solar system? The Sun creates what’s known as the heliosphere — a giant bubble of charged particles and magnetic fields blown outward by the Sun that stretches more than twice the distance to Pluto at its nearest edge, enveloping every planet in our solar system and shaping the space around us. To understand it, Solar Orbiter will travel as close as 26 million miles from the Sun, inside the orbit of Mercury. There, it will measure the magnetic fields, waves, energetic particles and plasma escaping the Sun while they are in their pristine state, before being modified and mixed in their long journey from the Sun.
A conceptual animation of the Sun with no magnetic field lines.
A conceptual animation of the Sun with magnetic field lines.
Solar Orbiter orbiting the Sun. No field lines.
Solar Orbiter orbiting the Sun. With field lines.
Solar Orbiter orbiting the Sun. No field lines.
Solar Orbiter orbiting the Sun. With field lines.
Credits
Please give credit for this item to:
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab
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Animators
- Adriana Manrique Gutierrez (USRA)
- Walt Feimer (KBR Wyle Services, LLC)
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Art director
- Michael Lentz (USRA)
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Producers
- Joy Ng (USRA)
- Genna Duberstein (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
- Karen Fox (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
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Technical support
- Aaron E. Lepsch (ADNET Systems, Inc.)
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Scientists
- Chris St. Cyr (NASA/GSFC)
- Teresa Nieves-Chinchilla (Catholic University of America)
- Holly Gilbert (NASA/GSFC)
- Daniel Mueller (ESA)
Release date
This page was originally published on Monday, January 27, 2020.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, May 3, 2023 at 1:45 PM EDT.