Space instruments provide early warnings for solar flares
Banner image: Crews prep the GOES-U satellite for launch at NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida. (Credit: NASA/Ben Smegelsky)
When a solar flare leaps out from around the sun, a small fleet of scientific instruments designed and built at the University of 蜜糖直播 Boulder form a first line of defense鈥攕potting these massive eruptions before any other instrument in space, then relaying the information to Earth in seconds.
On June 25, the fourth and final instrument in this suite, known as the (EXIS) program, is scheduled to launch into space. It will fly aboard the Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite-U (GOES-U)鈥攖he latest in a series of that monitor weather on Earth from orbit. GOES-U, which will be renamed GOES-19 once it reaches geostationary orbit, will blast off from NASA鈥檚 Kennedy Space Center in Florida on a SpaceX Falcon Heavy rocket.
The event marks the culmination of nearly 20 years of work for scientists and engineers at 蜜糖直播 Boulder鈥檚 (LASP).
鈥淚t鈥檚 bittersweet,鈥 said Frank Eparvier, associate director for science at LASP and lead scientist for EXIS. 鈥淚t鈥檚 like sending your kid off to college. There鈥檚 a sense of sadness that all of this long, preparatory work is ending, but pride and excitement that the goal of that work is becoming reality.鈥
The new EXIS instrument, which looks a bit like a souped-up toaster oven, will join three more nearly identical instruments, each orbiting Earth on a different GOES-R satellite. One hovers above the East Coast of the United States. Another is above the West Coast, while the third sits in storage in space, waiting to be called into duty if a problem arises with one of the other satellites.
They鈥檝e already built an impressive scientific legacy. The GOES program, a joint effort between NASA and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), keeps a close eye on events like hurricanes, tropical storms and more. But the EXIS instruments track a different kind of weather: 鈥渟pace weather,鈥 or various processes that begin around the sun and can influence conditions around our planet, sometimes in disastrous ways.
鈥淚f we want to understand these things that can affect our technology and safety on Earth, we need to look at the source, and that鈥檚 the sun,鈥 Eparvier said.
Dan Baker, director of LASP, noted that the institute is proud of its decades-spanning contributions to the GOES program.
鈥淟ASP is the only academic institution providing major hardware for the GOES-R series,鈥 Baker said.
鈥淟ASP has consistently delivered on time and on budget and demonstrated the highest levels of success for the operational needs of NOAA and the U.S. government,鈥 he said. 鈥淚n fact, LASP has been a model for how to design, build, test and operate space instrumentation in an operational context.鈥
Northern lights
For Eparvier, the launch also represents the achievement of an old dream.
When he was an undergraduate student at the University of Wisconsin-Madison in the 1980s, Eparvier spent a summer working night shifts at a local candle factory. One night, he was driving home along the shores of Wisconsin鈥檚 Lake Winnebago when he saw faint lights floating in the sky. He had spotted an aurora, a light show high in Earth鈥檚 atmosphere that arises from activity around the sun.
鈥淚t was a major solar storm, and I sat there until three in the morning on my chaise lounge looking at the aurora,鈥 Eparvier said. 鈥淭hat really got me interested: What is it? Why is it?鈥
Years later, EXIS gave him the opportunity to dig into those very questions.
Eparvier explained that each EXIS instrument includes two sensors: an X-Ray Sensor (XRS) and an Extreme Ultraviolet Sensor (EUVS). XRS, as its name suggests, picks up X-ray radiation streaming from the sun. It鈥檚 also attuned to detect the first hints of a flare exploding from the sun. Such bursts of energy can send charged particles hurtling toward our planet鈥攊n some cases, giving rise to auroras, like the one Eparvier witnessed in Wisconsin. In other cases, fast moving, energetic particles coming from the sun can endanger electronics or even human bodies in orbit.
EUVS is a different beast. It homes in on fluctuations in the sun鈥檚 activity that cause Earth鈥檚 atmosphere to inflate and deflate, as if the entire planet is breathing. If the atmosphere inflates too much, it can drag down satellites in orbit.
Scientists at NOAA use information from both types of sensors to give timely guidance to satellite operators and others across the globe to help them navigate safely through space.
鈥淓XIS really is providing an asset to the entire world,鈥 Eparvier said.
Generational project
Getting these important tools off the ground, however, was no easy feat. The LASP team began working on EXIS in 2005鈥擫ASP scientist Tom Woods led the concept development鈥攁nd built all four instruments at the same time. The first launched in 2016 and the second and third in 2018 and 2022.
The team also designed those instruments to withstand a harsh environment, Eparvier said. The GOES satellites orbit Earth from what are known as 鈥済eostationary鈥 orbits, which circle the planet from a distance of more than 22,000 miles in space鈥攁 region with a lot of radiation.
Over the years, more than 100 engineers and scientists at LASP worked to make EXIS a reality. They included Phil Chamberlin who started on the project as a doctoral student in the 2000s. He said the project was a perfect opportunity for budding researchers like him to learn the ins and outs of designing space instruments.
鈥淭he EXIS team is first-class and absolutely amazing, and I owe my career to them,鈥 said Chamberlin, now a senior research associate at LASP. 鈥淭hey trusted me with a lot of responsibility and gave me the freedom, to a point, to figure things out and design things myself.鈥
The final instrument is leaving for space soon. But all Eparvier has to do is open his computer to see EXIS data streaming back to Earth. In May 2024, for example, a series of flares from the sun rocked the planet, generating auroras that stretched as far south as Florida. He and his colleagues were among the first people on Earth to see the events coming.
And just like all those years ago on Lake Winnebago, he took the time to appreciate the lights in the sky.
鈥淢y wife and I went up to the Wyoming border and joined a group of people on a friend鈥檚 piece of land,鈥 Eparvier said. 鈥淲e sat there and took amazing pictures of the aurora.鈥