Cluster Spacecraft
Reach Greatest Separation At Fifth Anniversary
(14 July 2005) The four
spacecraft of ESAs Cluster fleet have reached their greatest distance
from each other in the course of their mission to study Earths
magnetosphere in three dimensions.
This operation,
marking the fifth anniversary of Cluster in space, transforms Cluster in the
first multi-scale mission ever.
In one of the most complex
manoeuvres ever conducted by ESA spacecraft, three of the spacecraft were
separated to 10,000 kilometres from each other, with the fourth spacecraft at
1,000 kilometres from the third one.
This new fleet formation for
Cluster was achieved in two months of operations. The repositioning of the
satellites was started by mission controllers at ESA's European Space
Operations Centre (ESOC), in Darmstadt, Germany, on 26 May, and was run until
14 July.
During the course of the mission, the distance between the
Cluster satellites had already changed five times, in a range between 100 and
5,000 kilometres. Varying the size - but not the shape - of the Cluster
constellation had allowed Cluster to examine Earths
magnetosphere at different scales.
But now this new
asymmetric flying formation is allowing the Cluster spacecraft to
make measurements of medium- and large-scale phenomena simultaneously,
transforming Cluster in the first ever multi-scale mission.
With this, it is possible to study at the same time the link between
small-scale kinetic processes of the plasma around Earth and the large-scale
morphology of the magnetosphere.
The knowledge gained by Cluster about
the magnetosphere - the natural magnetic shield that surrounds and protects our
planet - has already helped advance our understanding of how the solar wind
affects Earths natural space environment.
This is also important
in our daily life as, for instance, intense solar activity can disrupt
terrestrial communication networks, power grids and data lines.
(source: ESA)