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The Sun is an unpredictable, violent ball of gas and plasma, radiating fusion energy.
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It can send streams of charged particles right towards Earth without warning, potentially
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causing catastrophic damage to our power grid.
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And while we need the Sun to live, we also need to protect ourselves from its wrath.
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The problem is, we actually know very little about our nearest star because
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we haven't been able to get close enough to fully understand its behavior.
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But finally NASA believes it has the tech to touch the Sun.
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The Parker Solar Probe is humanity's first trip to a star.
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It will get seven times closer to the Sun than any mission before, and that's because
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of the probe's Thermal Protection System or TPS.
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The spacecraft and its instruments are shielded by an 11 centimeter thick piece of carbon
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foam sandwiched between two panels of superheated carbon-carbon composite.
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The TPS will enable the front of the shield to withstand temperatures as high as 1,370
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degrees Celsius, while the inside of the probe remains at the comfortable heat of a summer day - about 30 degrees Celsius.
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Twin solar arrays will power the spacecraft and its cooling system, which surprisingly utilizes a low-tech coolant: pressurized water.
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The ability to function in extreme heat is incredibly important because the Parker probe
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will venture to the corona - the Sun's outermost atmosphere.
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There, the data it collects will help answer two of the most vexing questions in astrophysics:
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why the corona is hotter than the solar surface and how solar wind is accelerated.
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From Earth, we can only ever see the corona during a total solar eclipse, which is why it is incredibly difficult to study.
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Because the density is so low, the corona's brightness is overpowered by energy coming from the solar surface.
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As the last layer of the Sun's atmosphere,
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the corona extends millions of miles into space.
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Here temperatures can rise to over 1 million degrees Celsius, which is about 300 times
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hotter than the photosphere- the lowest layer of the Sun's atmosphere.
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At this extreme heat, the Sun's gravity can't hold on to rapidly moving particles charged
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in the corona, so they escape in streams of accelerated plasma, known as solar wind.
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These streams carry the Sun's magnetic field
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far into space at speeds up to 800 kilometers per second.
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There are theories about the causes of coronal heating and solar wind acceleration, but we
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haven't been able to land on a definitive answer without actually going to the Sun,
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and that's why the Parker Solar Probe is so crucial.
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The spacecraft will orbit the Sun 24 times, coming as close as 5.9 million kilometers
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and moving as fast as 690,000 kilometers per hour.
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Once close enough, it will trace energy as it moves through the corona by measuring particle
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properties and shock waves in the Sun's plasma.
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If Parker manages to complete its seven year mission, its data will revolutionize the way
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we look at the Sun by solving these longstanding solar mysteries.
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Parker's discoveries will also help us better predict our nearest star's volatile
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behavior and enhance our ability to forecast solar storms to avoid global disaster here on Earth.
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If you want to see more Space Crafts, check out this playlist here.
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And be sure to let us know in the comments what astronomical phenomena you want to learn more about.
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