Publication | Closed Access
The Ulysses mission
117
Citations
0
References
1992
Year
Unknown Venue
Literary TheoryHistorical ScholarshipSpace MissionSolar Energetic ParticlesLiterary CriticismUlysses MissionSolar SystemLanguage StudiesHistorical EvidenceClassicsIntellectual HistorySpace ResearchSpace WeatherAstrophysicsLiterary HistoryHistorical MethodologyAerospace EngineeringPlanetary ExplorationDeep Space ExplorationArts
The Ulysses mission is unique in the history of the exploration of solar system by spacecraft. The path followed by Ulysses will make it possible, for the first time, to explore the heliosphere within a few astronomical units of the sun over the full range of heliographic latitudes, thereby providing the first characterization of the uncharted third heliospheric dimension. Advanced scientific instrumentation carried on board the spacecraft is designed to measure the properties of the heliospheric magnetic field, the solar wind, the sun/wind interface, solar radio bursts and plasma waves, solar energetic particles and galactic cosmic rays, solar X-rays, and interplanetary/interstellar neutral gas and dust. Ulysses will also be used to detect cosmic gamma-ray bursts and search for gravitational waves. The mission, a collaboration between ESA and NASA, was launched in October 1990 and employs a Jupiter gravity-assist to achieve the trajectory extending to high solar latitudes. The paper describes the characteristics of the Ulysses mission in order to establish a framework within which to better understand the objectives and goals of the scientific investigations.