The latest Decadal Survey for Solar and Space Physics just dropped, and it is filled with goodies ranging from new missions to plans for space weather.
The report comes from the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, and it outlines top priorities for space agencies and affiliated institutions in better understanding the solar system in the next decade. The report draws on 450 papers from the science community as well as other events including presentations and town halls.
Decadal surveys are important; they outline science objectives for a wide array of scientists. In 2021, the academies outlined finding Earth-like exoplanets, understanding the universe's densest objects, and improving understanding of the birth and growth of galaxies as top astronomical priorities.
The following year, the report dedicated to planetary science and astrobiology concluded that a Uranus probe should be the highest priority mission. Last year, a report from the academies put a sustained human presence off-Earth on the docket.
This year's report covered the gamut of solar and space physics, including how to better track the dynamic environment of our solar system and better understand the star at its heart .
The report called for NASA to pursue a mission that would launch a constellation of satellites that would observe the space environment near Earth and a spacecraft that would image the Sun at its poles. The report identified the National Science Foundation's Next Generation Global Oscillations Network, a solar observatory network, as the highest-priority large construction project.
"Lack of progress in solar and space physics over the next decade could have devastating consequences to society, in part because it would inhibit our ability to predict and mitigate against potentially harmful space weather impacts," said committee co-chair Stephen Fuselier, acting vice president of the Southwest Research Institute's space science division, in an academies release.
No comments:
Post a Comment