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Feb 2000
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=2000xmm..pres....4.&link_type=abstract
XMM Press Release INFO 4-2000
Other
Scientific paper
1. Contest rules
The European Space Agency (ESA) is launching a public competition to find the most suitable names for its four Cluster II space weather satellites. The quartet, which are currently known as flight models 5, 6, 7 and 8, are scheduled for launch from Baikonur Space Centre in Kazakhstan in June and July 2000.
Professor Roger Bonnet, ESA Director of Science Programme, announced the competition for the first time to the European Delegations on the occasion of the Science Programme Committee (SPC) meeting held in Paris on 21-22 February 2000. The competition is open to people of all the ESA member states (*). Each entry should include a set of FOUR names (places, people, or things from history, mythology, or fiction, but NOT living persons). Contestants should also describe in a few sentences why their chosen names would be appropriate for the four Cluster II satellites. The winners will be those which are considered most suitable and relevant for the Cluster II mission. The names must not have been used before on space missions by ESA, other space organizations or individual countries.
One winning entry per country will be selected to go to the Finals of the competition. The prize for each national winner will be an invitation to attend the first Cluster II launch event in mid-June 2000 with their family (4 persons) in a 3-day trip (including excursions to tourist sites) to one of these ESA establishments: ESRIN (near Rome, Italy): winners from France, Ireland, United Kingdom, Belgium. VILSPA (near Madrid, Spain): winners from The Netherlands, Norway, Sweden, Finland. ESTEC (near Amsterdam, The Netherlands): winners from Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Austria. ESOC (in the Rhine Valley, Germany): winners from Italy, Spain , Portugal.
During the first Cluster II launch event (June 2000) the chosen four names for the spacecraft will be announced. The grand prize will be: * a trip for the winner and family (4 people) to Paris where ESA's headquarters are located (including a social event) in early Autumn 2000. * a plaque for the winner. * a plaque and a special edition Cluster II scale model donated to the home town of the winner.
Contest details can be found on the Internet at: http://sci.esa.int/cluster/competition
Information on the competition can also be requested by normal mail by contacting the address below (**).
Entries can be submitted by: * Email: cluster@spd.estec.esa.nl * Normal mail to: "Name the Cluster Quartet", Science Programme Communication Service, SCI-MC, ESA - ESTEC, Postbus 299, 2200 AG Noordwijk ZH , The Netherlands (**)
Mailed entries must be postmarked no later than 10 May, 2000. The winners will be notified by letter in late May, 2000. (*) Participants must be nationals of one of the ESA member states
2. Cluster II - Mission to Explore the Sun-Earth Connection.
This summer, the European Space Agency (ESA) will be launching Cluster II, a unique scientific mission designed to explore space weather and discover how the Sun affects our world. For the first time, a fleet of four identical scientific spacecraft will fly in group formation along elliptical (egg-shaped) orbits around the planet. This satellite squadron will allow scientists to make the first detailed, three-dimensional, maps of the space environment within 120,000 km of the Earth's surface.
The Sun-Earth Connection
Most of us are aware that the Sun is an important influence on our lives. It brings us light and warmth, and occasionally causes painful sunburn, or even skin cancer, if we expose ourselves to its ultraviolet rays for a long time. When the Sun disappears at night or during a total eclipse, the Earth becomes cold and dark.
But the Sun also influences our lives in other, less obvious, ways. It does this by disturbing the "weather" in space. Every second, millions of tonnes of material are blasted out from the Sun into space in the form of charged particles - mainly electrons and protons. This stream of particles creates a solar wind which travels at supersonic speeds towards the Earth. Occasionally, violent solar storms eject high energy particles which streak across the 150 million kilometre gulf between the Sun and Earth in just a few hours. These storms are most frequent every 11 years. The next peak is expected in 2000, just as Cluster II is inserted into orbit to investigate their effects.
"Like the weather on Earth, the Sun is changing", says Prof R. Bonnet, ESA's Director of Science. "Like the weather, it is sometimes difficult to predict its variations. They influence not only the Earth but the whole set of planets in the Solar System and the spacecraft which are orbiting in the interplanetary medium and circling the Earth." Fortunately for us, the Earth's magnetic field creates a giant, protective bubble in space - the magnetosphere. Like a mountain in a gale, the magnetosphere forces most of the particles in the solar wind to flow around it. The gusts in the solar wind mould the Earth's magnetic bubble into a tadpole-shape, creating a tail which stretches millions of kilometres downwind.
However, Earth's magnetic defences can be breached by high-energy solar particles. Two weak points above the planet's magnetic poles, known as cusps, allow the solar wind to leak into the magnetosphere and spiral down magnetic field lines into the thin upper atmosphere. Other particles which are trapped in the magnetic bubble can collect and then sweep down into the atmosphere. In either case, the particles collide with molecules of air, creating beautiful curtains of light known as auroras or 'polar lights'.
"It's like a never-ending football game" says ESA's Cluster II project scientist, Philippe Escoubet. "The Sun is kicking particles towards us, like footballs. The Earth is the goal and its magnetic field is the goalkeeper. It's always trying to push the 'balls' away, but some get past. When particles score goals they disrupt the Earth. Sometimes the Sun is very quiet, but when it's very active we get a lot of 'balls' coming through."
Occasionally, the Earth's magnetic shield is so overwhelmed by particles blasted out during solar storms that the magnetic field fluctuates wildly, creating enormous electrical currents. These can induce major power cuts, like one in 1989 which struck six million Canadians during the middle of winter. Minor gusts in the solar wind can also interrupt short wave radio communications, damage communication satellites which transmit TV signals and telephone calls, and even increase corrosion in oil pipelines.
Cluster II investigates
Like four ships skimming through a sea of particles, the flotilla of Cluster II spacecraft will spend two years investigating this interaction between our nearest star, the Sun, and our fragile world.
They will swim through the various layers and boundaries within the magnetosphere, skim over the Earth's magnetic poles to investigate the cusps, and sail downwind to study the magnetic tail. As well as ploughing through the different regions of the magnetosphere, they will cross the shock wave which marks the edge of Earth's magnetic bubble and enter interplanetary space where the solar wind blows at full force.
Eleven identical instruments on board each spacecraft will study all aspects of the Earth's electrical and magnetic environment. Some of these are located on rods which protrude into the surrounding space, sweeping through the sea of charged particles as the spacecraft rotates. The magnetometers, which will measure local magnetic fields, are located on the end of two 5-metre-long booms. Four 50-metre wire antennas send back information on electrical fields and waves. Other instruments on the drum-shaped spacecraft investigate the population of charged particles and the electromagnetic phenomena associated with them.
Simultaneous measurements from the Cluster II quartet will provide invaluable snapshots of events taking place inside and outside the magnetosphere. Ground controllers will even be able to trim the spacecraft's courses, altering the distances between them in order to ensure that scientists rece
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