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Interstellar Boundary Explorer

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Interstellar Boundary Explorer
IBEX satellite
NamesExplorer 91
IBEX
SMEX-10
Mission typeAstronomy
OperatorNASA
COSPAR ID2008-051A Edit this at Wikidata
SATCAT no.33401
Websiteibex.swri.edu
Mission duration2 years (planned)
16 years, 24 days (in progress)
Spacecraft properties
SpacecraftExplorer XCI
Spacecraft typeInterstellar Boundary Explorer
BusMicroStar-1
ManufacturerOrbital Sciences Corporation
Launch mass107 kg (236 lb) [1]
Dry mass80 kg (180 lb)
Payload mass26 kg (57 lb)
Dimensions58 × 95 cm (23 × 37 in)
Power116 watts
Start of mission
Launch date19 October 2008, 17:47:23 UTC
RocketPegasus XL (F40)
Launch siteBucholz Airfield, Stargazer
ContractorOrbital Sciences Corporation
Entered serviceJanuary 2009
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric orbit[2]
RegimeHigh Earth orbit
Perigee altitude7,000 km (4,300 mi)
Apogee altitude220,886 km (137,252 mi)
Inclination10.99°
Period6604.00 minutes
Instruments
IBEX-Lo
IBEX-Hi

IBEX mission logo
Explorer program
← AIM (Explorer 90)
WISE (Explorer 92) →

Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX or Explorer 91 or SMEX-10) is a NASA satellite in Earth orbit that uses energetic neutral atoms (ENAs) to image the interaction region between the Solar System and interstellar space. The mission is part of NASA's Small Explorer program and was launched with a Pegasus-XL launch vehicle on 19 October 2008.[3]

The mission is led by Dr. David J. McComas (IBEX principal investigator), formerly of the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) and now with Princeton University. The Los Alamos National Laboratory and the Lockheed Martin Advanced Technology Center built the IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo sensors respectively. The Orbital Sciences Corporation manufactured the satellite bus and was the location for spacecraft environmental testing. The nominal mission baseline duration was two years after commissioning, and the prime ended in early 2011. The spacecraft and sensors are still healthy and the mission is continuing in its extended mission.[4]

IBEX is in a Sun-oriented spin-stabilized orbit around the Earth.[5] In June 2011, IBEX was shifted to a new, more efficient, much more stable orbit.[6] It does not come as close to the Moon in the new orbit, and expends less fuel to maintain its position.[6]

The spacecraft is equipped with two large aperture imagers which detect ENAs with energies from 10 eV to 2 keV (IBEX-Lo) and 300 eV to 6 keV (IBEX-Hi).

The mission was originally planned to be a 24-month operations period. The mission has since been extended, with the spacecraft still in operation as of 2024.

Spacecraft

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IBEX and Star 27.

The spacecraft is built on an octagonal base, roughly 58 cm (23 in) high and 95 cm (37 in) across. The dry mass is 80 kg (180 lb) and the instrument payload comprises 26 kg (57 lb). The fully fueled mass is 107 kg (236 lb), and the entire flight system launch mass, including the ATK Star 27 solid rocket motor, is 462 kg (1,019 lb). The spacecraft itself has a hydrazine attitude control system. Power is produced by a solar array with a capability of 116 watts, and nominal power use is 66 W (16 W for the payload). Communications are via two hemispherical antennas with a nominal downlink data rate of 320 kbps and an uplink rate of 2 kbps.[7]

Science goal

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The Interstellar Boundary Explorer (IBEX) mission science goal is to discover the nature of the interactions between the solar wind and the interstellar medium at the edge of the Solar System.[8] IBEX has achieved this goal by generating full sky maps of the intensity (integrated over the line-of-sight) of ENAs in a range of energies every six months. Most of these ENAs are generated in the heliosheath, which is the region of interaction.

Mission

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IBEX in a fairing

Launch

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The IBEX satellite was mated to its Pegasus XL launch vehicle at Vandenberg Air Force Base, California, and the combined vehicle was then suspended below the Lockheed L-1011 Stargazer mother airplane and flown to Kwajalein Atoll in the central Pacific Ocean.[9] Stargazer arrived at Kwajalein Atoll on 12 October 2008.[8]

The IBEX satellite was carried into space on 19 October 2008, by the Pegasus XL launch vehicle. The launch vehicle was released from Stargazer, which took off from Kwajalein Atoll, at 17:47:23 UTC.[3] By launching from this site close to the equator, the Pegasus launch vehicle lifted as much as 16 kg (35 lb) more mass to orbit than it would have with a launch from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.[10]

Mission profile

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The IBEX satellite initially launched into a highly elliptical transfer orbit with a low perigee and used a solid fuel rocket motor as its final boost stage at apogee in order to raise its perigee greatly and to achieve its desired high-altitude elliptical orbit.

IBEX is in a highly eccentric elliptical terrestrial orbit, which ranges from a perigee of about 86,000 km (53,000 mi) to an apogee of about 260,000 km (160,000 mi). Its original orbit was about 7,000 × 320,000 km (4,300 × 198,800 mi)[5] — that is, about 80% of the distance to the Moon — which has changed primarily due to an intentional adjustment to prolong the spacecraft's useful life.

This very high orbit allows the IBEX satellite to move out of the Earth's magnetosphere when making scientific observations. This extreme altitude is critical due to the amount of charged-particle interference that would occur while taking measurements within the magnetosphere. When within the magnetosphere of the Earth (70,000 km (43,000 mi)), the satellite also performs other functions, including telemetry downlinks.[11]

Orbit adjusted

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In June 2011, IBEX shifted to a new orbit that raised its perigee to more than 30,000 km (19,000 mi). The new orbit has a period of one third of a lunar month, which, with the correct phasing, avoids taking the spacecraft too close to the Moon, whose gravity can negatively affect IBEX's orbit. The now spacecraft uses less fuel to maintain a stable orbit, increasing its useful lifespan to more than 40 years.[6]

Instruments

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IBEX Lo sensor

The heliospheric boundary of the Solar System is being imaged by measuring the location and magnitude of charge-exchange collisions occurring in all directions. The satellite's payload consists of two energetic neutral atom (ENA) imagers, IBEX-Hi and IBEX-Lo. Each consists of a collimator that limits their fields of view (FoV) a conversion surface to convert neutral hydrogen and oxygen into ions, an electrostatic analyzer (ESA) to suppress ultraviolet light and to select ions of a specific energy range, and a detector to count particles and identify the type of each ion. Both of these sensors are a single-pixel camera with a field of view of roughly 7° x 7°. The IBEX-Hi instrument is recording particle counts in a higher energy band (300 eV to 6 keV) than the IBEX-Lo energy band (10 eV to 2 keV). The scientific payload also includes a Combined Electronics Unit (CEU) that controls the voltages on the collimator and the ESA, and it reads and records data from the particle detectors of each sensor.[12]

Communication

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Compared to other space observatories, IBEX has a low data transfer rate due to the limited requirements of the mission.[13]

... IBEX data transfer rates are slow compared with other telescopes due to the nature of the data it collects. IBEX does not need a "high speed" connection, since it only has the opportunity to collect up to a few particles per minute. Communication from the satellite to the ground is 20 times slower than a typical home cable modem (320,000 bits per second) [is the satellite's transfer speed],[14] and from the ground to the satellite only 2,000 bits per second, which is 250 times slower! Once the signal is collected by the receivers on Earth, it is carried over the internet to Mission control center in Dulles, Virginia, and to the IBEX Science Operation Center in San Antonio, Texas".

— NASA's IBEX Q and A[13]

Data collection

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High-energy map of the heliosphere
The ribbon of ENA emissions seen in the IBEX map.

IBEX is collecting energetic neutral atom (ENA) emissions that are traveling through the Solar System to Earth and cannot be measured by conventional telescopes. These ENAs are created on the boundary of our Solar System by the interactions between solar wind particles and interstellar medium particles.[15]

On average IBEX-Hi detects about 500 particles per day, and IBEX-Lo, less than 100.[16] By 2012, over 100 scientific papers related to IBEX were published, described by the principal investigator as "an incredible scientific harvest".[16]

Data availability

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As the IBEX data is validated, the IBEX data is made available in a series of data releases on the SwRI IBEX Public Data website. In addition, the data is periodically sent to the NASA Space Physics Data Facility (SPDF), which is the official archive site for IBEX data. SPDF data can be searched at the Heliophysics Data Portal.

Science results

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Animation illustrating IBEX's collection of data on neutral atoms at the boundary of the Solar System.
Far beyond the orbit of Neptune, the solar wind and the interstellar medium interact to create a region known as the inner heliosheath, bounded on the inside by the termination shock, and on the outside by the heliopause.

Initial data revealed a previously unpredicted "very narrow ribbon that is two to three times brighter than anything else in the sky".[17] Initial interpretations suggest that "the interstellar environment has far more influence on structuring the heliosphere than anyone previously believed".[15] It is unknown what is creating the energetic neutral atoms (ENA) ribbon.[18] The Sun is currently traveling through the Local Interstellar Cloud, and the heliosphere's size and shape are key factors in determining its shielding power from cosmic rays. Should IBEX detect changes in the shape of the ribbon, that could show how the heliosphere is interacting with the Local Fluff.[19] It has also observed ENAs from the Earth's magnetosphere.[4]

In October 2010, significant changes were detected in the ribbon after six months, based on the second set of IBEX observations.[20]

It went on to detect neutral atoms from outside the Solar System, which were found to differ in composition from the Sun.[21] Surprisingly, IBEX discovered that the heliosphere has no bow shock, and it measured its speed relative to the local interstellar medium (LISM) as 23.2 km/s (14.4 mi/s), improving on the previous measurement of 26.3 km/s (16.3 mi/s) by Ulysses.[22] Those speeds equate to 25% less pressure on the Sun's heliosphere than previously thought.[21][22]

In July 2013, IBEX results revealed a 4-lobed tail on the Solar System's heliosphere.[23]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "IBEX". ESA. Retrieved 13 August 2015.
  2. ^ "Trajectory: IBEX (Explorer 91) 2008-051A". NASA. 28 October 2021. Retrieved 9 December 2021. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  3. ^ a b Ray, Justin (19 October 2008). "Mission Status Center: Pegasus/IBEX". Spaceflight Now. Retrieved 27 November 2009.
  4. ^ a b "Archived Updates". Southwest Research Institute.
  5. ^ a b "Fact Sheet: IBEX" (PDF). Orbital ATK. FS001_06_3695. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 March 2015. Retrieved 27 April 2015.
  6. ^ a b c McComas, Dave (14 November 2011). "IBEX Orbit-Raising Maneuver". Southwest Research Institute. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  7. ^ "Display: IBEX (Explorer 91) 2008-051A". NASA. 28 October 2021. Retrieved 8 December 2021. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  8. ^ a b "Interstellar Boundary Explorer Mission". NASA. 14 October 2008. Archived from the original on 4 October 2019. Retrieved 16 October 2008. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  9. ^ Diller, George (3 October 2008). "Expendable Launch Vehicle Status Report". NASA. ELV-100308.
  10. ^ McComas, Dave (November 2006). "Janet Ball, Lockheed Martin Space Systems". Southwest Research Institute. Retrieved 19 November 2009.
  11. ^ "IBEX FAQ". NASA. 14 January 2008. Archived from the original on 9 March 2016. Retrieved 14 January 2019. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. ^ "IBEX COSPAR ID 2008-051A". NASA. 28 November 2018. Retrieved 22 January 2019. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  13. ^ a b "IBEX Q and A". NASA. 25 July 2008. Archived from the original on 24 June 2017. Retrieved 14 May 2015. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  14. ^ http://www.nasa.gov/pdf/280255main_IBEXFactSheetOct08.pdf Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  15. ^ a b McComas, Dave (15 October 2009). "First Science Results from IBEX!". Southwest Research Institute. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  16. ^ a b McComas, Dave (15 October 2012). "3 Years of IBEX Observations". Southwest Research Institute.
  17. ^ Baldwin, Emily (15 October 2009). "IBEX maps edge of Solar System". Astronomy Now. Archived from the original on 21 September 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
  18. ^ Kerr, Richard A. (16 October 2009). "Tying Up the Solar System With a Ribbon of Charged Particles". Science. 326 (5951). Science Magazine: 350–351. doi:10.1126/science.326_350a. PMID 19833930.
  19. ^ "Mysterious band of particles holds clues to Solar System's future". Cosmos Magazine. 25 January 2010. Archived from the original on 13 October 2016. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  20. ^ "The Ever-Changing Edge of the Solar System". Astrobiology Magazine. 2 October 2010. Archived from the original on 23 August 2014. Retrieved 8 November 2010.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  21. ^ a b "IBEX Reveals a Missing Boundary At the Edge Of the Solar System". NASA. 10 May 2012. Archived from the original on 7 March 2013. Retrieved 11 May 2012. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  22. ^ a b Kohler, Susanna (14 May 2012). "No Shocks for This Bow: IBEX Says We're Wrong". Astrobites. Retrieved 14 August 2016.
  23. ^ "NASA's IBEX Provides First View Of the Solar System's Tail". NASA. 10 July 2013. Archived from the original on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 13 August 2015. Public Domain This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
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