The
Solar Physics Division of the
American Astronomical Society boasts 555 members (as of May 2007), compared to several thousand in the parent organization. In Europe, there is the
European Solar Physics Division of the
European Physical Society, which has been organizing the European Solar Physics Meeting (ESPM). A major thrust of current (2009) effort in the field of solar physics is integrated understanding of the entire
Solar System including the Sun and its effects throughout interplanetary space within the
heliosphere and on
planets and planetary
atmospheres. Studies of phenomena that affect multiple systems in the heliosphere, or that are considered to fit within a heliospheric context, are called
heliophysics, a new coinage that entered usage in the early years of the current millennium.
Space based Helios Helios-A and Helios-B are a pair of spacecraft launched in December 1974 and January 1976 from Cape Canaveral, as a joint venture between the
German Aerospace Center and NASA. Their orbits approach the Sun closer than Mercury. They included instruments to measure the solar wind, magnetic fields, cosmic rays, and interplanetary dust. Helios-A continued to transmit data until 1986.
SOHO The Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, SOHO, is a joint project between
NASA and ESA that was launched in December 1995. It was launched to probe the interior of the Sun, make observations of the solar wind and phenomena associated with it and investigate the outer layers of the Sun.
HINODE A publicly funded mission led by the Japanese Aerospace Exploration Agency, the HINODE satellite, launched in 2006, consists of a coordinated set of optical, extreme ultraviolet and X-ray instruments. These investigate the interaction between the solar corona and the Sun's magnetic field.
SDO The Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) was launched by NASA in February 2010 from Cape Canaveral. The main goals of the mission are understanding how solar activity arises and how it affects life on Earth by determining how the Sun's magnetic field is generated and structured and how the stored magnetic energy is converted and released into space.
PSP The Parker Solar Probe (PSP) was launched in 2018 with the mission of making detailed observations of the outer solar corona. It has made the closest approaches to the Sun of any artificial object.
Solar Orbiter The Solar Orbiter was launched in 2020. Solar Orbiter is the most advanced scientific instrument ever sent to study our life-giving star. It takes closer and more detailed images of the Sun than any spacecraft before and is the first to explore its polar regions.
Ground based ATST The Advanced Technology Solar Telescope (ATST) is a solar telescope facility that is under construction in Maui. Twenty-two institutions are collaborating on the ATST project, with the main funding agency being the National Science Foundation.
SSO Sunspot Solar Observatory (SSO) operates the
Richard B. Dunn Solar Telescope (DST) on behalf of the NSF.
Big Bear The Big Bear Solar Observatory in California houses several telescopes including the New Solar Telescope(NTS) which is a 1.6 meter, clear-aperture, off-axis Gregorian telescope. The NTS saw first light in December 2008. Until the ATST comes on line, the NTS remains the largest solar telescope in the world. The Big Bear Observatory is one of several facilities operated by the Center for Solar-Terrestrial Research at
New Jersey Institute of Technology (NJIT).
Other EUNIS The Extreme Ultraviolet Normal Incidence Spectrograph (EUNIS) is a two channel imaging spectrograph that first flew in 2006. It observes the solar corona with high spectral resolution. So far, it has provided information on the nature of coronal bright points, cool transients and coronal loop arcades. Data from it also helped calibrating SOHO and a few other telescopes. == See also ==