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Ionosphere-Thermosphere Storm Probes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ionosphere-Thermosphere Storm Probes
Mission typeTwo Earth orbiters investigating the ionosphere and thermosphere
OperatorNASA
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
Inclination60°

The Ionosphere-Thermosphere Storm Probes (I-TSP) is a NASA mission which will study the ionosphere and the thermosphere. This mission is part of the Living With a Star program, the second mission in a pair of geospace missions. The first mission is the Radiation Belt Storm Probes, which were launched in August 2012.

Mission

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Like the Radiation Belt Storm Probes, the I-TSP will be a twin spacecraft mission. The mission is to study distributions of ionospheric and thermospheric densities, geomagnetic disturbances, and ionospheric irregularities. This mission relates to the Sun and solar storms in that it studies the effects of solar storms on geospace.[1] This mission can save astronauts and satellites.

Goals

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The Ionosphere-Thermosphere Storm Probes mission has two goals:

  1. Determine the effects of solar variability on the global-scale behavior of ionospheric electron density
  2. Determine the solar and geospace causes of small scale ionospheric irregularities

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Future Directions in Solar and Space Physics. 2004. doi:10.17226/11188. ISBN 978-0-309-59271-0. Retrieved 2007-08-14. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
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