NASA's Parker Solar Probe: Record-Breaking Venus Flyby

parker solar
 On August 21, NASA's Parker Solar Probe completed its sixth gravity-assist flyby of Venus, a maneuver crucial in decelerating the spacecraft for its increasingly proximal solar explorations. Monitored by the Deep Space Network, the probe skimmed Venus' surface at a mere 4,000 kilometers, traveling at 24 km/s. Since its launch in 2018, Parker has been on a mission to uncover the enigmas of solar wind and the Sun's idiosyncrasies via progressively closer overflights of the solar photosphere.



The probe's trajectory is intimately tied to Venus, using the planet's gravity to counteract the Sun's pull and reduce its orbital energy. The recent flyby was the sixth of seven planned Venus flybys throughout the probe's mission and helped slow Parker's velocity by up to 9,500 km/h. This maneuver set the stage for the next five solar flybys, the inaugural one set for September 27, marking the seventeenth such mission flyby.


These future missions will see Parker set new distance and speed records, getting as near as 7.3 million kilometers to the photosphere and attaining speeds exceeding 635,000 km/h. Following the final Venus flyby slated for November 6, 2024, the probe will prepare for its ultimate solar overflights in 2025, inching closer to the Sun's mysteries.


Source: NASA.


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