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EZIE Mission Launches to Study the Aurora

EZIE has launched successfully, poised to probe a poorly understood aspect linking space weather to dazzling aurora.

artist's concept of EZIE satellites in orbit with green aurora in background

artist's concept of EZIE satellites in orbit with green aurora in background

Auroras put on an amazing show, but they also provide a window into space weather, where the Sun's magnetized wind of particles and Earth's protective magnetic shield meet. Now, a new, low-cost mission has launched to explore this poorly understood link.

The Electroject Zeeman Imaging Explorer (EZIE) went to space on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket on Friday, March 14th, at 11:43 p.m. PDT (local time) from Vandenberg Space Force Base in California. Launching as part of the Transporter 13 rideshare mission, which deployed 74 satellites, the three EZIE satellites separated from the payload just over two hours after liftoff. EZIE is now in a Sun-synchronous low-Earth orbit about 600 kilometers (373 miles) above Earth's surface.

Launch photo shows rocket launching at night

Launch photo shows rocket launching at night

EZIE is a partnership between NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, the Johns Hopkins Applied Physics Laboratory, and Blue Canyon Technologies of Boulder, Colorado, which supplied the CubeSat frames. Part of the Heliophysics Mission division of NASA’s Science Directorate, EZIE is an Explorer class mission, with a budget of only $53.3 million.

The three EZIE satellites are built on standard 6U cubesat chassis, using commercial, off-the-shelf technology. These do not incorporate active propulsion and will instead skip along the tenuous upper atmosphere by rotating and adjusting for drag as they speed along at 17,000 miles per hour (7.6 km/s).

EZIE CubeSats on a table, one on its side in the middle, the other tall on either side

EZIE CubeSats on a table, one on its side in the middle, the other tall on either side

EZIE Will See Auroral Electrojets

A key aspect of the mission is understanding electrojets, the streams of electrons that link the broader magnetosphere that envelopes Earth to the auroras within our planet's atmosphere. When you witness an auroral display, you're only seeing the very bottom of these currents as the electrons interact with atoms and molecules in the upper atmosphere — those colorful curtains are actually part of a long electromagnetic loop that extends far into space.

Electrojets diagram

Electrojets diagram

To study the broader phenomenon, the trio of EZIE satellites are looking at the oxygen layer below them. Each spacecraft's spectrometer will pick up oxygen molecules as they interact with the electrons embedded in Earth's magnetic field. As each spacecraft sweeps by a few minutes after the one before it, together the three units will watch electrojets evolve. The information the probes collect will help determine if electrojets are as simple as the diagram above or if their structures are more complex.

Video Playerhttps://ezie.jhuapl.edu/mission/videos/mission-2/Story_2-6.mp400:0000:0000:00Use Up/Down Arrow keys to increase or decrease volume.

Each spacecraft will pass over the same region of the aurora 2 to 10 minutes after the one before it.

Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory

"Missions have studied these currents before, but typically either at the very large or very small scales," says Larry Kepko (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center) in a recent press release. "EZIE will help us understand how these currents form and evolve, at scales we've never probed."

The mission is also linked to the Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH), a quartet of coronagraph missions launched just last week. The area explored by EZIE is expected to overlap with PUNCH’s generous 90 degree-wide field of view, so the two missions will complement each other. The mission also shares another link with PUNCH, as both missions were launched on the same Falcon 9 stage 1 booster, marking the fastest turnaround for a reusable SpaceX booster, with one launch just four days before the next.

EZIE launches at an ideal time, as we’re in the peak of the 11-year Solar Cycle 25. The mission should have lots of space weather to look at during its 18-month nominal mission.

an EZIE CubeSat with solar panel extended in the cleanroom

an EZIE CubeSat with solar panel extended in the cleanroom

The project is getting students involved as well. EZIE-Mag kits enable students to compare terrestrial magnetometer readings on Earth against what EZIE sees in space. The EZIE project will incorporate this information, making student groups effectively part of the team.

EZIE is pushing the limits for small mission technology as it explores the links and boundaries of space weather.

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