
A European-Chinese language house climate mission will launch to orbit tonight (Might 18), and you may watch the motion stay.
SMILE (quick for Photo voltaic wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Hyperlink Explorer) will use 4 science devices to review how Earth is affected by the photo voltaic wind, the stream of charged particles streaming consistently from the solar.
“In doing so, SMILE will enhance our understanding of solar storms, geomagnetic storms and the science of space weather,” ESA officials wrote in a mission description.
The Chinese Academy of Sciences is responsible for SMILE’s satellite platform, spacecraft operations and three of the four science instruments — the Ultraviolet Imager (UVI), the Light Ion Analyser (LIA) and the Magnetometer (MAG).
ESA provided SMILE’s payload module, the other science instrument (the Soft X-ray Imager, or SXI), the rocket and assembly and testing integration and services. The agency also contributed to the UVI instrument and will help with operations in orbit, according to ESA’s mission description.
If all goes according to plan tonight, the three-stage Vega C will deploy SMILE in a circular orbit 435 miles (700 kilometers) above Earth about 56 minutes after liftoff.
The spacecraft will then conduct 11 engine burns over the next 25 days, changing its orbit to a highly elliptical one that takes it 75,185 miles (121,000 km) above the North Pole and 3,107 miles (5,000 km) above the South Pole.
After that, the mission team will perform a number of checkouts to make sure SMILE and its instruments are working properly.
“About three months after launch, the team will receive the first X-ray and ultraviolet images, and then finally begin the science that SMILE is designed to do. The planned mission lifetime is three years,” ESA officials wrote in the mission description.
The 115-foot-tall (35 meters) Vega C, which was developed by ESA, debuted in July 2022. It has six flights under its belt to date, five of them successful. Tonight’s launch will be the first Vega C mission operated by the Italian company Avio; the others were managed by France-based Arianespace.
