Wednesday, January 24, 2024
Station Keeping maneuver #28 today
Thursday, June 8, 2023
18 Jun 2023 Lunar Transit
Here is the Flight Ops Team movie of the transit
I hope everyone is enjoying SDO's view of the Sun as we near the maximum of Solar Cycle 25!
20 May 2023 Lunar Transit and the Long-term Predicts for the 3rd Quarter of 2023
- 20 May 2023, 0222--0306 UTC (22:22--23:06 ET) - LunTran_2023140_3dc_82pshdw
- 18 Jun 2023, 0557--0612 UTC (01:57--02:12 ET) - LunTran_2023169_1dc_3pshdw
- 21 Jun 2023, TBD - Tentative date for Momentum Management Maneuver #47
- 04 Jul 2023, 1148 UTC (07:48 ET) - Handover Season Starts with First Handover (-Z HGA Active Prior)
- 20 Jul 2023, 0725 UTC (03:25 ET) - Eclipse Season Starts
- 26 Jul 2023, TBD - Tentative Date for Station Keeping Maneuver #27
- 04 Aug 2023, 1913--1919 UTC (15:13--1519 ET) - Solar RFI
- 05 Aug 2023, 1910--1918 UTC (15:10--1518 ET) - Solar RFI
- 06 Aug 2023, 1909--1916 UTC (15:09--15:19 ET) - Solar RFI
- 15 Aug 2023, 0248 UTC (22:48 ET) - Handover Season Ends with Completion of Last Handover (+Z HGA Active After)
- 16 Aug 2023, 0659 UTC (02:59 ET) - Eclipse Season Ends
- 05 Nov 2023, 0200 ET - Daylight Saving Time Ends, GSFC Local Time now UTC-5:00
Here is a movie of the predicted 20 May 2023 lunar transit:
And here is what a daily movie shows for that date:Tuesday, May 2, 2023
EVE Calibration Rocket, May 3, 2023, Streaming on NASA TV
The EVE sounding rocket used to calibrate the SDO EVE instrument launches from the White Sands Missile Range in New Mexico in 2015. (Image courtesy LASP.)
NASA TV will stream the launch starting at 11:45 AM MDT (1:45 pm ET) at the link https://video.ibm.com/channel/nasa-tv-wallops.
Enjoy!
Wednesday, April 26, 2023
Calibration Activities Today 1700-2030 UTC
During the calibration activity science data may be missing, blurred, or shifted.
Wednesday, March 22, 2023
Website Status Update - Data Outage
Sunday, February 12, 2023
Happy Launch Anniversary to SDO!
These polar filaments are a key part of removing the previous cycle's magnetic field from the poles of the Sun. As Solar Cycle 25 field erupts near the equator, some of it moves towards the poles where it meets the last remaining magnetic field of Solar Cycle 24. The fields tend to have opposite directions and they form a filament where they meet. This filament will circle the pole. Some of the oddity in this movie is seeing the plasma move around the pole in both directions.
The Sun will continue to surprise us, in SDO's 13th year and probably for many years to come.
I would like to thank the people who built and launched SDO, it has been an amazing observatory. I congratulate the people who run SDO on keeping this fantastic tool on station and performing great!
SDO is GO!