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PUBLIC INFORMATION OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE May 28, 1991
Science teams on the Ulysses mission to the poles of the sun
are preparing to begin interplanetary physics investigations
during the forthcoming encounter with Jupiter, European Space
Agency (ESA) and NASA project officials reported Tuesday.
Ulysses' science objectives at Jupiter were reviewed by Drs.
Edward J. Smith of JPL and Klaus-Peter Wenzel of the European
Space Research and Technology Centre (ESTEC) at the 1991 Spring
Meeting of the American Geophysical Union in Baltimore, Md.
Smith and Wenzel are the NASA and European project scientists,
respectively, for the joint NASA-ESA mission.
The Ulysses spacecraft is presently cruising through the
ecliptic plane -- the plane in which the planets of the solar
system orbit -- on a trajectory that will use the gravity of
Jupiter to deflect Ulysses out of the ecliptic plane and onward
to the polar regions of the sun.
The 809-pound spacecraft is expected to reach the Jovian
giant and its system of satellites around Feb. 8, 1992.
Once there, Ulysses will take measurements of the Jovian
magnetosphere during a two-week sweep past the planet, said Dr.
Edgar Page of the ESA Space Science Department. Science teams
will conduct experiments to detect cosmic gamma-ray bursts, X-ray
emissions and search for gravitational waves.
Some experiments, such as the Solar Flare X-Ray and Cosmic
Gamma Ray Burst Experiment (HUS), will yield new information on
1
the composition of energetic particles and positively charged
atoms (ions) in the region influenced by the planet.
The spacecraft will fly past Jupiter at about 30 degrees
north Jovian latitude, said JPL Ulysses Project Manager Willis
Meeks. At nearest approach, Ulysses will pass the planet at
approximately 6.3 Jupiter radii -- 450,480 kilometers or about
279,300 miles -- from the center.
Immediately after encounter, the spacecraft will be in
"solar opposition," so that Earth is directly between the sun and
the spacecraft. Scientists operating the spacecraft's radio
transmitters will use the solar opposition to calibrate
instruments and intensify the search for gravitational waves.
From there, Ulysses will use the extra acceleration gained
from the gravitational pull of Jupiter to swing itself out of the
ecliptic plane and onward to the southern solar pole. In May
1994, Ulysses will reach 70 degrees south solar latitude and
begin its primary mission of exploring the polar regions of the
sun and space beyond the poles.
At closest approach, Ulysses will travel within 1.3
astronomical units, or about 120 million miles, of the sun.
Ulysses is a five-year mission managed jointly by NASA and
the European Space Agency. ESA provided the spacecraft and
ground control computer system. NASA provided the launch vehicle
and half of the onboard science instruments. Tracking and data
collection during the mission are being provided by NASA's Deep
Space Network, which is managed by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
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