The
Solar Orbiter spacecraft lifted off from Cape Canaveral,
Florida, at 11:03 p.m. ET (0403 GMT Monday), kicking off a
10-year voyage.
"This was picture perfect. And suddenly you really felt you are
connected to the rest of the solar system," Daniel Mueller, a
scientist for ESA who worked on the mission, said after
lift-off.
The minivan-sized spacecraft will deploy solar panels and
antennas before carrying on toward the sun, a trek assisted by
the gravitational forces of Earth and Venus. It eventually will
reach as close as 26 million miles from the sun's surface, or
about 72 percent of the distance between the star and Earth.
"I have been in solar physics for many years; I just never
thought I would actually witness something come to fruition like
this and actually launch. It's amazing," said Holly Gilbert of
NASA.
Solar Orbiter's primary mission of examining the sun's polar
regions will help researchers understand the origins of solar
wind, a soup of charged particles highly concentrated at the two
poles, which blast through our solar system, affecting
satellites and electronics on Earth.
The mission is also expected to glean insight into how
astronauts can be protected from radiation in space, which can
damage DNA.
Solar Orbiter carries 10 instruments packed behind a massive
324-pound (147 kg) heat shield, three of which will peer through
tiny windows to survey how the sun's surface changes over time.
(Reporting by Joey Roulette in Washington and Ismail Shakil in
Bengaluru; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
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