(Press-News.org) SAN ANTONIO — May 9, 2023 —NASA has selected Southwest Research Institute for a Phase A study to develop SwRI’s Space Weather Solar Coronagraph (SwSCOR) on behalf of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). NOAA’s Space Weather Next Program is charged with providing critical data for its space weather prediction center. SwRI is one of five organizations developing a definition-phase study to produce the next-generation NOAA L1 Series COR instrument to detect and characterize Earth-directed coronal mass ejections (CMEs).
CMEs are huge bursts of coronal plasma threaded with intense magnetic fields ejected from the Sun over the course of several hours. CMEs arriving at Earth can generate geomagnetic storms, which can cause anomalies in and disruptions to modern conveniences such as electronic grids and GPS systems. Coronagraphs are instruments that block out light emitted by the Sun’s surface so that its outer atmosphere, or corona, can be observed.
“SwSCOR is a short, externally occulted coronagraph with a novel 1.5-stage occultation scheme that enables darker, wider-field imaging than a single multi-disk occulter alone,” said SwRI’s Dr. Craig DeForest, who is leading the study. “Its Arago spot suppressor redirects the major source of diffracted stray light — the Arago spot — formed by the occulter itself. This design enables imaging closer to and/or farther from the Sun than comparably sized instruments with conventional occultation.”
Stray light is the largest challenge of coronagraph design. Coronal structures a few degrees away from the Sun are a billion times fainter than the Sun itself. Diffraction injects stray light into the optics as sunlight scatters around the occulter in front of the instrument. Multi-disk occulters cut stray light by many orders of magnitude in the current generation of single-stage coronagraphs. Adding more disks yields more occultation but tightens the machining or assembly tolerances.
“SwRI is investigating several novel occulter designs,” DeForest said. “Preliminary laboratory experiments with our latest prototype indicate a more than 10-fold improvement over similar-geometry multi-disk designs in use today, while improving manufacturability and alignment tolerances.”
SwRI designed SwSCOR using internal funding, incorporating heritage processes and facilities from the development of the Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere mission’s Wide-Field Imager (PUNCH/WFI). DeForest is the principal investigator of PUNCH, a NASA Small Explorer (SMEX) mission set to launch in 2025, which is designed to better understand how the mass and energy of the Sun’s corona become the solar wind that fills the solar system.
“We prototyped and tested key elements of SwSCOR in SwRI’s stray light cleanroom facility,” DeForest said. “It will directly measure the 3D trajectory of halo CMEs, eliminating the strongest ambiguity in arrival time forecasting: confusion between wide, slow CMEs and narrow, fast CMEs.”
For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/heliophysics.
END
SwRI selected for Phase A study to develop next-generation NOAA coronagraph
Short, externally occulted Space Weather Solar Coronagraph features novel 1.5-stage occultation scheme
2023-05-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Long molecule of RNA essential to our GI tract’s ability to contract and move food along
2023-05-09
AUGUSTA, Ga. (May 9, 2023) – A long molecule of RNA found in abundance in the healthy smooth muscle cells that give our blood vessels strength and flexibility is also essential to the continuous contraction that moves food through our gastrointestinal tract.
Without CARMN, a long, noncoding RNA, which means it doesn’t produce proteins but does help regulate cell activity, the 30-foot-long GI tract doesn’t contract as it should.
That can result in a painful even lethal situation where partially undigested food gets ...
A CRISPR-edited calf shows virus resistance
2023-05-09
A gene-edited calf shows resistance to a common bovine virus. Bovine viral diarrhea virus (BVDV) causes gastrointestinal and respiratory symptoms as well as reproductive failure in cattle around the world. Vaccines against the virus exist but the virus evolves quickly and vaccines are not always fully protective. Aspen Workman and colleagues used the CRISPR/Cas9 system to swap out just six amino acids in the bovine CD46 receptor in one calf. The calf showed a dramatic reduction in susceptibility to the virus and ...
Potential found to counter depression by restoring key brain rhythm
2023-05-09
Led by researchers from NYU Grossman School of Medicine and University of Szeged in Hungary, a new study in mice and rats found that restoring certain signals in a brain region that processes smells countered depression.
Publishing in the journal Neuron online May 9, the study results revolve around nerve cells (neurons), which “fire” – or emit electrical signals – to transmit information. Researchers in recent years discovered that effective communication between brain regions ...
Evidence of Ice Age human migrations from China to the Americas and Japan
2023-05-09
Scientists have used mitochondrial DNA to trace a female lineage from northern coastal China to the Americas. By integrating contemporary and ancient mitochondrial DNA, the team found evidence of at least two migrations: one during the last ice age, and one during the subsequent melting period. Around the same time as the second migration, another branch of the same lineage migrated to Japan, which could explain Paleolithic archeological similarities between the Americas, China, and Japan. The study appears May 9 in the journal Cell Reports.
“The Asian ...
Trends in deaths from falls among adults age 65 or older
2023-05-09
About The Study: Between 1999 and 2020, deaths coded as being caused by falls among adults age 65 or older in the U.S. increased in number and rates for the overall population and for every population subgroup, although the magnitude of the increase varied. However, the relative ranking of the different groups has not changed over time.
Authors: Alexis R. Santos-Lozada, Ph.D., of Pennsylvania State University in University Park, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jama.2023.3054)
Editor’s ...
Extracting the best flavor from coffee
2023-05-09
WASHINGTON, May 9, 2023 – Espresso coffee is brewed by first grinding roasted coffee beans into grains. Hot water then forces its way through a bed of coffee grains at high pressure, and the soluble content of the coffee grains dissolves into the water (extraction) to produce espresso.
In 2020, researchers found that more finely ground coffee beans brew a weaker espresso. This counterintuitive experimental result makes sense if, for some reason, regions exist within the coffee bed where less or even no coffee is extracted. This uneven extraction becomes more pronounced when coffee is ground more finely.
In Physics of Fluids, from AIP Publishing, ...
Preserving pine forests by understanding beetle flight
2023-05-09
WASHINGTON, May 9, 2023 – The mountain pine beetle is one of the main causes of tree mortality in the pine forests of North America. For example, the insect has killed thousands of acres of pine forest in British Columbia and Alberta, and as a result, the areas are more vulnerable to wildfire. Increased tree mortality has turned Canada’s forests into a large net source of atmospheric carbon dioxide – emitted from the burned or decaying wood of dead trees – rather than a sink.
In Physics of Fluids, by AIP Publishing, researchers from the University of Alberta studied the flight performance of the mountain pine beetle from a fluid mechanics and an entomological perspective. ...
US gun violence: half of people from Chicago witness a shooting by age 40, study suggests
2023-05-09
Study following Chicagoans over a 25-year period suggests over half of the city’s Black and Hispanic population, and a quarter of its White population, have seen a shooting by age 40.
Researchers followed over two thousand people, with 50% of all the study’s participants witnessing a shooting.
Average age when first witnessing a shooting was just 14 years old.
Women only slightly less likely than men to witness shootings, despite men being far more likely to get shot.
Such levels of violence exposure may cause chronic stress and knock-on health implications for populations in Chicago and elsewhere.
A ...
Assessment of medical cannabis and health-related quality of life
2023-05-09
About The Study: In this study, patients using medical cannabis reported improvements in health-related quality of life, which were mostly sustained over time. Adverse events were rarely serious but common, highlighting the need for caution with prescribing medical cannabis.
Authors: Thomas R. Arkell, Ph.D., of the Swinburne University of Technology in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi: ...
Making vaccines longer lasting
2023-05-09
The SARS-Cov-2 pandemic illustrates how variable vaccines can be in their length of efficacy, with regular boosters needed to keep people protected. In comparison, the immunity generated by a single vaccination against the measles virus can last decades.
It has always remained a scientific mystery as to why only some vaccines lead to life-long protection. Now a paper published in the journal, Immunity, led by Prof. David Tarlinton and Dr Marcus Robinson, both from Monash University’s Central Clinical School in Melbourne, Australia, has found that the clue likely lies in the body producing a unique subtype of an immune cell in response to some ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Brits still associate working-class accents with criminal behavior – study warns of bias in the criminal justice system
What do you think ‘guilty’ sounds like? Scientists find accent stereotypes influence beliefs about who commits crimes
University of Calgary nursing study envisions child trauma treatment through a Marvel and DC lens
Research on performance optimization of virtual data space across WAN
Researchers reveal novel mechanism for intrinsic regulation of sugar cravings
Immunological face of megakaryocytes
Calorie labelling leads to modest reductions in selection and consumption
The effectiveness of intradialytic parenteral nutrition with ENEFLUID???? infusion
New study reveals AI’s transformative impact on ICU care with smarter predictions and transparent insights
Snakes in potted olive trees ‘tip of the iceberg’ of ornamental plant trade hazards
Climate change driving ‘cost-of-living' squeeze in lizards
Stem Cell Reports seeks applications for its Early Career Scientist Editorial Board
‘Brand new physics’ for next generation spintronics
Pacific Islander teens assert identity through language
White House honors Tufts economist
Sharp drop in mortality after 41 weeks of pregnancy
Flexible electronics integrated with paper-thin structure for use in space
Immune complex shaves stem cells to protect against cancer
In the Northeast, 50% of adult ticks carry Lyme disease carrying bacteria
U of A Cancer Center clinical trial advances research in treatment of biliary tract cancers
Highlighting the dangers of restricting discussions of structural racism
NYU Tandon School of Engineering receives nearly $10 million from National Telecommunications and Information Administration
NASA scientists find new human-caused shifts in global water cycle
This tiny galaxy is answering some big questions
Large and small galaxies may grow in ways more similar than expected
The ins and outs of quinone carbon capture
Laboratory for Laser Energetics at the University of Rochester launches IFE-STAR ecosystem and workforce development initiatives
Most advanced artificial touch for brain-controlled bionic hand
Compounding drought and climate effects disrupt soil water dynamics in grasslands
Multiyear “megadroughts” becoming longer and more severe under climate change
[Press-News.org] SwRI selected for Phase A study to develop next-generation NOAA coronagraphShort, externally occulted Space Weather Solar Coronagraph features novel 1.5-stage occultation scheme