stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/gallery/work.html
Gallery: Work at UNH. PLASTIC Inside Vacuum Chamber. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. Stan Ellis Working on PLASTIC in Cleanroom. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. Stan Ellis and John Gaidos Working on PLASTIC in Cleanroom. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 3.8mB. Inspection of PLASTIC in UNH Cleanroom. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. PLASTIC Mounted on Lexan Case Base. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. PLASTIC Showing Instrument Connections. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.4mB. Stan Ellis Posing with FM1.
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/team/index.html
No scientific mission is possible without the cooperation of many individuals and institutions. STEREO Plastic is made possible by the following institutions:. NASA Goddard Space Flight Center. University of New Hampshire. Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics.
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/gallery/people.html
UNH Principal Investigator, Toni Galvin. Screen Quality (576x383) 89kB. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. MPE Co-Investigator, Berndt Klecker. Screen Quality (576x383) 89kB. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. UNH Instrument Scientist, Katherine Singer. Screen Quality (576x383) 122kB. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.9mB. UNH Co-Investigator, Lynn Kistler. Screen Quality (576x383) 128kB. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 2.5mB. UNH Co-Investigator, Mark Popecki. Screen Quality (576x383) 104kB.
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/mission/science.html
The primary science goal of the STEREO mission is to understand the origin and consequences of Coronal Mass Ejections, the most energetic type of eruption that occurs on the Sun, and a primary driver of space weather on Earth. Other specific objectives, that are needed to complete the primary goal, are to. 1 Understand the causes and mechanisms that trigger the eruption of CMEs. 2 Characterize how CMEs move through the heliosphere. The reason is a phenomenon called "space weather". When the magnetic fiel...
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/gallery/instrumentation.html
PLASTIC FM1 and FM2 Fully Assembled at UNH. Highest Quality (2272x1704) 1.7mB. PLASTIC FM2 in Thermal Vacuum Chamber at APL. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 0.9mB. PLASTIC FM1 Without Red Tag Covers. Highest Quality (2400x1596) 440kB.
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/index.html
Welcome to the STEREO PLASTIC website. Part of the NASA STEREO mission for providing a global view of the Sun and its effects on the Heliosphere. The NASA Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory. Includes the University of New Hampshire, the University of Bern, the Max Planck Institute, Christian-Albrechts-University Kiel, and NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, under the overall direction of the University of New Hampshire (Dr. A.B. Galvin,PI).
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/outreach/index.html
Our partner in outreach efforts in the STEREO mission is the Christa McAuliffe Planetarium. Located in Concord, NH. The programs at the Planetarium to which STEREO EPO contributes include.
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/mission/index.html
The Solar Terrestrial Relations Observatory (STEREO) Mission is comprised of two nearly identical spacecraft with identical scientific payloads. The science instruments provide both remote images and. Particle and magnetic field observations. During its two-year mission, STEREO will explore the origin and evolution of coronal mass ejections. The spacecraft and instruments were commissioned during these first three months. Science operations commenced at the end of January 2007. This orbital separation al...
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/news/index.html
STEREO was successfully launched at 8:52 pm on October 25, 2006 (EDT) aboard a Boeing Delta II rocket from Cape Canaveral Air Force Base. During the first three months, while STEREO was still in near-Earth orbit, the spacecraft and payloads on both spacecraft finished commissioning. Both spacecraft are now performing science operations in their respective heliocentric orbits. Photo by NASA KSC. PLASTIC A and PLASTIC B are now fully operational. Instruments are off during solar conjunction intervals.
stereo.sr.unh.edu
STEREO - Plastic at the University of New Hampshire
http://stereo.sr.unh.edu/gallery/index.html