Press Release
Capturing a Solar Storm in 3-D
APL Spacecraft Experts Enhance Systems to Reconstruct 3-D STEREO Imagery
The APL-built and -operated twin STEREO observatories have made the first 3-D measurements of solar explosions, known as coronal mass ejections, enabling scientists to see their size and shape, and image them as they travel approximately 93 million miles from the sun to Earth. Scientists will be able to use this information to help determine how these strong solar storms will impact Earth’s atmosphere.
The Solar TErrestrial RElations Observatory’s science data is enhanced, in part, due to the STEREO guidance and control team at The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), in Laurel, Md. They’re helping mission scientists more easily reconstruct 3-D imagery by very accurately pointing the spacecraft and reducing its jitter or movement. “By tuning each spacecraft’s control software, much like a race car’s control system is tuned for optimal performance on the track, spacecraft system performance is now approximately five times better than at launch and seven times better than specifications require,” says Andy Driesman, STEREO’s system engineer at APL.