Humans May Have Arrived on the Sun's '4-Yard Line'

NASA awaits confirmation of historic solar mission on Christmas Eve
By John Johnson,  Newser Staff
Posted Dec 24, 2024 6:34 AM CST
NASA Awaits Confirmation of a Mind-Boggling Sun Feat
This image made available by NASA shows an artist's rendering of the Parker Solar Probe approaching the sun. It's designed to take solar punishment like never before, thanks to a revolutionary heat shield capable of withstanding 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit.   (Steve Gribben/Johns Hopkins APL/NASA via AP, File)

Confirmation awaits, but NASA scientists appear to have pulled off a remarkable Christmas Eve voyage on two fronts:

  • The sun: The space agency's Parker Solar Probe by now should have wrapped up a flight to within 3.8 million miles of the sun, the closest any craft has ever come. For context, if the Earth and sun were at opposite ends of a football field, the solar probe "would be on the 4-yard line," NASA's Joe Westlake told the AP.

  • The speed: During the flyby, the probe would have been traveling at a hard-to-fathom 430,000 miles per hour—"the fastest object ever made by humans," per the New York Times.
  • Confirmation: The record-breaking pass happened at 6:53am ET if all went well, per Space.com. However, NASA won't get its first proof until Friday.
  • The mission: Parker launched in 2018 and has made 21 previous solar flybys, but Tuesday's breaks the previous record by hundreds of thousands of miles and ventures into a solar region never before explored. After Tuesday, it will make two more flybys before the mission is complete, the last in June. "It's a voyage of discovery," says NASA's Nicky Fox. "We really are going into the unknown. Nothing has flown through the atmosphere of a star, and no other mission will for a long time."
(More NASA stories.)

Get the news faster.
Tap to install our app.
X
Install the Newser News app
in two easy steps:
1. Tap in your navigation bar.
2. Tap to Add to Home Screen.

X