| |
|||
|
Contact: Nancy Neal
|
|
![]() |
|
|
March 20, 2003
- RELEASE:
C03-h
NASA SELECTS NEXT MEDIUM-CLASS EXPLORER MISSION A swarm of spacecraft, designed to fly through the space storms that cause aurora, has been chosen as the next mission in NASA's Medium-class Explorer (MIDEX) program. "The
Explorer program allows the science community to identify the most compelling
science questions and then design the most effective mission to answer
those questions," said Edward The
mission, to be launched in 2007, is the Time History of Events and Macroscale
Interactions during Substorms (THEMIS). THEMIS is a five-satellite mission
with the job of determining NASA
also selected, as a mission-of-opportunity, an instrument for the Extreme
Universe Space Observatory (EUSO) mission of the European Space Agency
(ESA). EUSO will study the most From its location on the International Space Station, EUSO will look down on the Earth's atmosphere to observe the characteristic blue light that high-energy cosmic rays generate after hitting the Earth's atmosphere. NASA will provide the largest Fresnel lens ever built for the EUSO telescope. Dr. James Adams Jr. of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala., will lead the agency's contribution to EUSO at a total project cost to NASA of $36 million. NASA
has decided to continue studying the Widefield Infrared Survey Explorer
(WISE), a four-channel, super-cooled infrared telescope designed to survey
the entire sky with 1,000 times The
Explorer Program is designed to provide frequent, low-cost access to space
for physics and astronomy missions with small to mid-sized spacecraft.
The first two MIDEX missions are the The selected proposals were among 31 MIDEX and 11 mission-of-opportunity proposals originally submitted to NASA in October 2001 in response to an Explorer Program Announcement of Opportunity issued in July 2001. NASA selected five proposals in April 2002 for detailed feasibility studies. Funded by NASA at $450,000 each, these studies focused on cost, management, and technical plans, including small business involvement and educational outreach. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., manages the Explorer Program for the Office of Space Science, Washington. For
more information about NASA and the Explorers Program on the Internet,
visit: http://www.nasa.gov Information
and artist's concepts of these missions are available on the Internet
at: EUSO: http://aquila.lbl.gov/EUSO/ WISE: http://www.astro.ucla.edu/~wright/WISE -end- |
|||