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NASA powers on new Sun tracking instrument

Press Trust of India  |  Washington 

has powered on its latest instrument on the (ISS) to detect the total amount of emitted by the Sun

Total and Spectral solar Irradiance Sensor (TSIS-1), installed on the ISS, is fully operational with all instruments collecting science data, said.

"TSIS-1 extends a long data record that helps us understand the Sun's influence on Earth's budget, ozone layer, atmospheric circulation, and ecosystems, and the effects that solar variability has on the Earth system and climate change," said Dong Wu, TSIS-1 at in the US.

"This sensor's data will give us a better understanding of Earth's primary supply and provide information to help improve models simulating the planet's climate," said Wu.

The instrument was launched from in aboard a Falcon 9 rocket on December 15, last year.

For over two months, the operations team at the University of Colorado, in the US has been testing TSIS-1.

The sensor studies the total amount of emitted by the Sun using the Total Irradiance Monitor, one of two sensors onboard the ISS.

The monitor first started collecting science data - called "first light"- on January 11 after its doors were opened to fully view the Sun.

The sensor extends a 40-year measurement of the Sun's total to Earth.

The second onboard sensor, called the Spectral Irradiance Monitor, measures how the Sun's is distributed over the ultraviolet, visible and infrared regions of light.

Measuring the distribution of the Sun's is important because each wavelength of light interacts with Earth's atmosphere differently.

For instance, spectral irradiance measurements of the Sun's ultraviolet are critical to understanding the ozone layer -Earth's natural sunscreen that protects life from harmful

The sensor experienced first light on March 4 when full science data collection began.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 19 2018. 11:55 IST
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