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    Ulysses at the Sun's North Pole

    15 Jan 2008

    On 14 January, almost a year after last visiting the south solar pole, the European-built Ulysses spaceprobe arrived over the Sun's northern polar cap, thereby completing the third rapid south-to-north transit to date. "This important milestone for the joint ESA-NASA mission also coincides with the start of a new cycle of solar activity," explains Richard Marsden, ESA's Ulysses Mission Manager, "It's been calm on the space weather front recently and so we are looking forward to some solar fireworks over the coming months as the number of sunspots increases."

    Ulysses's third solar orbit

    Ulysses's highly inclined orbit takes the spacecraft to nearly 80° solar latitude. As part of an impressive fleet of interplanetary spacecraft that includes the twin STEREO probes launched by NASA in 2006 and ESA's SOHO observatory, Ulysses is ideally placed to provide a unique perspective as our star gears up for the next peak in its activity cycle that will be reached around 2012.

    Although the Sun has been relatively quiet during the past year, this hasn't meant that the spacecraft operations team has been able to sit back and relax. On the contrary, the rapid transit from south to north through perihelion is one of the most nerve-racking periods in the 6.2-year orbit of Ulysses, now in its 18th year of operations. This is because the spacecraft experiences a dynamic disturbance as it comes closer to the Sun, causing the spinning probe to wobble, a motion called nutation. "We have to keep the nutation under control," said Marsden, "otherwise we could lose contact with the spacecraft. Fortunately, the operations team has developed a robust strategy to tackle this problem, and there haven't been too many scary moments this time around!" In fact, this strategy is so effective that the scientific measurements have hardly been affected. The nutation is expected to die away over the next few weeks as Ulysses once again heads away from the Sun.

    Ulysses's unique long-term observations

    A long-standing scientific puzzle that has been under investigation during the recent south-to-north transit is the clear N-S asymmetry in the structure of the heliosphere that was found when Ulysses visited the polar caps for the first time in 1994-95, also near solar minimum. At that time, the magnetic equator separating positive and negative magnetic fields was pushed 10° southward with respect to the Sun's rotational equator. The reason for the offset is still not fully understood, and preliminary indications are that the recent data show much less of an effect than previously. Further study is needed before firm conclusions can be drawn, however, as the Ulysses measurements are not conducted in each hemisphere simultaneously and temporal changes cannot be ruled out. Nevertheless, investigations of this kind demonstrate the value of long-term out-of-ecliptic observations that only Ulysses can supply.

    Contact

    Nigel Angold
    ESA - Mission Operations Manager
    Email: Nigel.Angoldjpl.nasa.gov

    Richard Marsden
    ESA - Ulysses Mission Manager & Project Scientist
    Email: Richard.Marsdenesa.int


    Last Update: 15 Jan 2008

    • Shortcut URL
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    • Images and Videos
    • Ulysses orbit plot up to March 2009
    • See also
    • Orbit/Navigation
    • PR 29-1995: Ulysses's First North Polar Pass
    • Ulysses's Second North Polar Pass

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