logo
Artificial solar eclipses created by two European satellites

Artificial solar eclipses created by two European satellites

1News17-06-2025

A pair of European satellites have created the first artificial solar eclipses by flying in precise and fancy formation, providing hours of on-demand totality for scientists.
The European Space Agency released the eclipse pictures at the Paris Air Show yesterday. Launched late last year, the orbiting duo have churned out simulated solar eclipses since March while zooming tens of thousands of kilometres above Earth.
Flying 150 metres apart, one satellite blocks the sun like the moon does during a natural total solar eclipse as the other aims its telescope at the corona, the sun's outer atmosphere that forms a crown or halo of light.
It's an intricate, prolonged dance requiring extreme precision by the cube-shaped spacecraft, less than 1.5 metres in size. Their flying accuracy needs to be within a mere millimeter, the thickness of a fingernail. This meticulous positioning is achieved autonomously through GPS navigation, star trackers, lasers and radio links.
Dubbed Proba-3, the US$210 million (NZ$346.03 million) mission has generated 10 successful solar eclipses so far during the ongoing checkout phase. The longest eclipse lasted five hours, said the Royal Observatory of Belgium's Andrei Zhukov, the lead scientist for the orbiting corona-observing telescope. He and his team are aiming for a wondrous six hours of totality per eclipse once scientific observations begin in July.
ADVERTISEMENT
Scientists already are thrilled by the preliminary results that show the corona without the need for any special image processing, said Zhukov.
"We almost couldn't believe our eyes,' Zhukov said in an email. 'This was the first try, and it worked. It was so incredible.'
Two spacecraft of the Proba-3 mission aligning to create an eclipse to capture a coronagraph in space. (Source: Associated Press)
Zhukov anticipates an average of two solar eclipses per week being produced for a total of nearly 200 during the two-year mission, yielding more than 1000 hours of totality. That will be a scientific bonanza since full solar eclipses produce just a few minutes of totality when the moon lines up perfectly between Earth and the sun — on average just once every 18 months.
The sun continues to mystify scientists, especially its corona, which is hotter than the solar surface. Coronal mass ejections result in billions of tons of plasma and magnetic fields being hurled out into space. Geomagnetic storms can result, disrupting power and communication while lighting up the night sky with auroras in unexpected locales.
While previous satellites have generated imitation solar eclipses — including the European Space Agency and NASA's Solar Orbiter and Soho observatory — the sun-blocking disk was always on the same spacecraft as the corona-observing telescope. What makes this mission unique, Zhukov said, is that the sun-shrouding disk and telescope are on two different satellites and therefore far apart.
The distance between these two satellites will give scientists a better look at the part of the corona closest to the limb of the sun.
ADVERTISEMENT
"We are extremely satisfied by the quality of these images, and again this is really thanks to formation flying' with unprecedented accuracy, ESA's mission manager Damien Galano said from the Paris Air Show.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Magpie Ancestors Lived In Aotearoa New Zealand 19 Million Years Ago, New Study Finds
Magpie Ancestors Lived In Aotearoa New Zealand 19 Million Years Ago, New Study Finds

Scoop

time5 days ago

  • Scoop

Magpie Ancestors Lived In Aotearoa New Zealand 19 Million Years Ago, New Study Finds

Magpies may be considered Aussie immigrants, but new research reveals that their relatives lived in Aotearoa New Zealand 19 million years ago. Magpies were introduced from Australia in the 1860s and since then New Zealanders have developed a love-hate relationship with the sometimes aggressive bird. Researchers – from Flinders University (Adelaide), the University of New South Wales (Sydney), Canterbury Museum and Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha University of Canterbury – have spent more than two decades unearthing and analysing fossils discovered near St Bathans in Central Otago. They have now found enough fragments to describe a new species of currawong, which was an ancestor of the bird that menaces New Zealand today. The newly discovered bird, which the researchers have named the St Bathans Currawong, lived in New Zealand around 19 to 16 million years ago. It probably went extinct near the end of the Miocene, an era that ran from 20 million years ago to 5 million years ago. The ancient bird would have been about the same size as the Australian magpie found in New Zealand today but was probably all black. Co-author and Canterbury Museum Senior Curator Natural History, Dr Paul Scofield, said the research, published today in the journal PalZ, challenges New Zealand views on the much-maligned magpie. 'We persecute the magpie as an Australian that has no place in the New Zealand ecosystem but its close relatives lived here in the past,'' he says. 'We've probably been without a member of the magpie's extended family for only 5 million years.' Co-author and Flinders University Associate Professor Trevor Worthy says New Zealand's ecosystem has changed dramatically over millions of years and harboured diverse species across different eras. 'There's an idea that we should aim to return New Zealand to a pre-European ecological state,'' he says. 'But at that point in time, New Zealand's ecosystems had been changing continuously for millions of years. Aotearoa had lost much of the floral diversity formerly present by the time humans arrived. There were few fruiting tree species left and the loss of currawongs and other pigeons reflects this. 'Other groups of plants and animals arrived from 2.6 million to 11,700 years ago. Many more have arrived since humans occupied the land. The pre-European ecological state of New Zealand is not necessarily any better or worse than any other time in the past. Instead, the fossil record suggests there was no utopian state and that we should celebrate the diversity we currently have.' The St Bathans fossil site, which has been studied since 2001, was once at the bottom of a large prehistoric lake. It offers the only significant insight into Aotearoa's terrestrial wildlife from 16 to 19 million years ago. Scofield says the work has revealed that New Zealand's bird population in the Miocene era had surprisingly strong similarities to that of Australia today. 'During the Miocene, 20 to 5 million years ago, New Zealand was much different. Walking through a New Zealand forest from that era, you would have seen numerous eucalypts, laurels and Casuarina, much like you would in an Australian forest today.' 'The major thing that shaped the New Zealand we see today was the extinction of many plants and animals that thrived in warm climates after a period of rapid cooling that began about 13 million years ago.' The distinctive call of the currawong would not have been the only birdsong you would hear in ancient New Zealand. Separate research led by Dr Vanesa De Pietri of Te Whare Wānanga o Waitaha University of Canterbury has found that the early Miocene New Zealand bush was alive with more birdsong than today. Analysis of songbird fossils found at St Bathans indicates there were probably many more different species of songbirds living in New Zealand 20 million years ago than just before humans arrived.

SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas explodes, no injuries reported
SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas explodes, no injuries reported

1News

time20-06-2025

  • 1News

SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas explodes, no injuries reported

A SpaceX rocket being tested in Texas exploded Thursday, sending a dramatic fireball high into the sky. The company said the Starship "experienced a major anomaly" at about 11pm (local time) while on the test stand preparing for the tenth flight test at Starbase, SpaceX's launch site at the southern tip of Texas. "A safety clear area around the site was maintained throughout the operation and all personnel are safe and accounted for," SpaceX said in a statement on the social platform X. It marked the latest in a series of incidents involving Starship rockets. On January 16, one of the massive rockets broke apart in what the company called a "rapid unscheduled disassembly," sending trails of flaming debris near the Caribbean. Two months later, Space X lost contact with another Starship during a March 6 test flight as the spacecraft broke apart, with wreckage seen streaming over Florida. ADVERTISEMENT A live stream has captured the moment a SpaceX Starship rocket exploded into a gigantic fireball when preparing for a flight test. (Source: Associated Press) Following the back-to-back explosions, one of the 123m Starship rockets, launched from the southern tip of Texas, tumbled out of control and broke apart on March 27. SpaceX had hoped to release a series of mock satellites following lift-off, but that got nixed because the door failed to open all the way. Then the spacecraft began spinning and made an uncontrolled landing in the Indian Ocean. At the time, SpaceX chief executive Elon Musk called the launch "a big improvement" from the two previous demos and promised a much faster launch pace moving forward, with a Starship soaring every three to four weeks for the next three flights. Tesla and SpaceX chief executive officer Elon Musk. (Source: Associated Press) SpaceX said Thursday's explosion posed no hazards to nearby communities. It asked people not to try to approach the site. The company said it is working with local officials to respond to the explosion. ADVERTISEMENT Watch the extended video of the explosion here on TVNZ+.

Artificial solar eclipses created by two European satellites
Artificial solar eclipses created by two European satellites

1News

time17-06-2025

  • 1News

Artificial solar eclipses created by two European satellites

A pair of European satellites have created the first artificial solar eclipses by flying in precise and fancy formation, providing hours of on-demand totality for scientists. The European Space Agency released the eclipse pictures at the Paris Air Show yesterday. Launched late last year, the orbiting duo have churned out simulated solar eclipses since March while zooming tens of thousands of kilometres above Earth. Flying 150 metres apart, one satellite blocks the sun like the moon does during a natural total solar eclipse as the other aims its telescope at the corona, the sun's outer atmosphere that forms a crown or halo of light. It's an intricate, prolonged dance requiring extreme precision by the cube-shaped spacecraft, less than 1.5 metres in size. Their flying accuracy needs to be within a mere millimeter, the thickness of a fingernail. This meticulous positioning is achieved autonomously through GPS navigation, star trackers, lasers and radio links. Dubbed Proba-3, the US$210 million (NZ$346.03 million) mission has generated 10 successful solar eclipses so far during the ongoing checkout phase. The longest eclipse lasted five hours, said the Royal Observatory of Belgium's Andrei Zhukov, the lead scientist for the orbiting corona-observing telescope. He and his team are aiming for a wondrous six hours of totality per eclipse once scientific observations begin in July. ADVERTISEMENT Scientists already are thrilled by the preliminary results that show the corona without the need for any special image processing, said Zhukov. "We almost couldn't believe our eyes,' Zhukov said in an email. 'This was the first try, and it worked. It was so incredible.' Two spacecraft of the Proba-3 mission aligning to create an eclipse to capture a coronagraph in space. (Source: Associated Press) Zhukov anticipates an average of two solar eclipses per week being produced for a total of nearly 200 during the two-year mission, yielding more than 1000 hours of totality. That will be a scientific bonanza since full solar eclipses produce just a few minutes of totality when the moon lines up perfectly between Earth and the sun — on average just once every 18 months. The sun continues to mystify scientists, especially its corona, which is hotter than the solar surface. Coronal mass ejections result in billions of tons of plasma and magnetic fields being hurled out into space. Geomagnetic storms can result, disrupting power and communication while lighting up the night sky with auroras in unexpected locales. While previous satellites have generated imitation solar eclipses — including the European Space Agency and NASA's Solar Orbiter and Soho observatory — the sun-blocking disk was always on the same spacecraft as the corona-observing telescope. What makes this mission unique, Zhukov said, is that the sun-shrouding disk and telescope are on two different satellites and therefore far apart. The distance between these two satellites will give scientists a better look at the part of the corona closest to the limb of the sun. ADVERTISEMENT "We are extremely satisfied by the quality of these images, and again this is really thanks to formation flying' with unprecedented accuracy, ESA's mission manager Damien Galano said from the Paris Air Show.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store