May 22, 2024

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NASA's heliophysics experiment to study the sun on European mission

The Joint EUV coronal Diagnostic Investigation (JEDI) will fly aboard the European Space Agency’s Vigil space weather mission and capture new views that will help researchers connect features on the sun’s surface to those in the sun’s outer atmosphere, the corona. Credit: NASA
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The Joint EUV coronal Diagnostic Investigation (JEDI) will fly aboard the European Space Agency’s Vigil space weather mission and capture new views that will help researchers connect features on the sun’s surface to those in the sun’s outer atmosphere, the corona. Credit: NASA

NASA announced Tuesday it selected a new instrument to study the sun and how it creates massive solar eruptions. The agency's Joint EUV coronal Diagnostic Investigation, or JEDI, will capture images of the sun in extreme ultraviolet light, a type of light invisible to our eyes but reveals many of the underlying mechanisms of the sun's activity.

Once integrated aboard the ESA's (European Space Agency's) Vigil mission, JEDI's two telescopes will focus on the middle layer of the solar corona, a region of the sun's atmosphere that plays a key role in creating the and the solar eruptions that cause space weather.

The Vigil space mission, planned to launch in 2031, is expected to provide around-the-clock space weather data from a unique position at sun-Earth Lagrange point 5—a gravitationally stable point about 60 degrees behind Earth in its orbit. This vantage point will give space weather researchers and forecasters a new angle to study the sun and its eruptions.

NASA's JEDI will be the first instrument to provide a constant view of the sun from this perspective in —giving scientists a trove of new data for research, while simultaneously supporting Vigil's ability to monitor space weather.

"JEDI's observations will help us link the features we see on the sun's surface with what we measure in the solar atmosphere, the corona," said Nicola Fox, associate administrator, Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

"Combined with Vigil's first-of-its-kind, eagle eye view of the sun, this will change the way we understand the sun's drivers of space weather—which in turn can lead to improved warnings to mitigate space weather effects on satellites and humans in space as well as on Earth."

Provided by NASA

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