The image has amazed NASA scientists who now expect more treasures from the
robotic spacecraft mission.
While the solar approach of the probe took place on November 8, NASA only
recently received the mission’s first data. And one of the first images they
received – a "coronal streamer” – surpassed all their expectations. Taken by the
probe’s powerful camera when it was about 16.9 million miles from our star’s
surface, the picture clearly shows the sun’s corona extending thousands of miles
into outer space. The spacecraft also captured a bright object near the center
of the image, which the scientists said was the planet Jupiter, RT reported.
"What we are looking at now is completely brand new,” Parker Solar Probe project
scientist Nour Raouafi of Johns Hopkins University said Wednesday after
researchers gathered in Washington for the meeting of the American Geophysical
Union. "Nobody looked at this before.”
In addition to releasing the image of the corona, NASA also shared a data clip
recorded by the space-based observatory, STEREO-A, showing the location of
Parker Solar Probe as it flies through the sun’s outer atmosphere.
Scientists hope for more discoveries in the information they’ve begun receiving
after the solar probe started transmitting data back to Earth on December 7. "We
don't know what to expect so close to the Sun until we get the data, and we’ll
probably see some new phenomena,” Raouafi said. "Parker is an exploration
mission — the potential for new discoveries is huge.”
The US space agency launched the $1.5 billion mission back in August to find
answers that have puzzled scientists about the sun for decades. Over the next
seven years, NASA hopes to learn more about the life cycle of stars, as well as
the energy patterns of heat and radiation the sun emits. Parker Solar Probe will
orbit the center of the Solar System at an average distance of only 4 million
miles and will use its revolutionary heat shield to withstand 10,000F (5,500C)
temperatures emitted by the star’s photosphere.
Source:Tasnim