Newsweek

NASA Probe 'Is Like Sticking a Thermometer in the Sun'

The Parker Solar Probe will zoom toward the sun at speeds of up to 430,000 miles per hour, making it the fastest spacecraft ever flown.
The Parker Solar Probe will reveal how the sun sends out plumes of energetic particles, like the solar flare shown above.
sun probe story

When a campfire is too hot, take a step back. This advice is brought to you by common sense and basic physics. But here’s a mystery: Why isn’t this true for the sun, whose surface is actually cooler than its fiery atmosphere?

Eugene Parker was puzzling over this and other mysteries when he got his big eureka moment: The sun, he realized, emits a steady stream of hot particles that causes the northern lights and occasionally fries power grids and communications satellites. This “solar wind,” as Parker called it, didn’t exactly explain the campfire conundrum, but it earned the 30-year-old grad student a Ph.D. and a reputation as one of the foremost astronomers of all time.

The same year Parker published his work, in 1958, a group of scientists drew up a bucket list

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