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  • NASA's Parker Solar Probe will soon fly closer

  • to the Sun than any spacecraft before it-about 4 million

  • miles from the visible surface. But getting that close to the Sun

  • requires some fancy orbital mechanics. It takes 55 times

  • more energy to go to the Sun than it does to go to Mars.

  • Why is it so hard to get to the Sun? The answer is related to why

  • Earth doesn't just fall straight into the Sun, despite the strong gravitational

  • attraction. Earth, and everything on it, is traveling very

  • fast-about 67,000 miles per hour-in a direction that is

  • basically always sideways relative to the Sun. If you launch a

  • rocket from Earth, straight toward the Sun, it won't lose that sideways speed,

  • and so it will miss the Sun. The only way to get the rocket

  • to go right into the Sun is to cancel all that sideways motion. Leave

  • even a little bit and it will miss the Sun and enter a new orbit.

  • To cancel Earth's motion, you have to launch the spacecraft backward as fast as Earth

  • is hurtling forward. But 67,000 miles an hour is really

  • fast. Spacecraft have to go upward at only 25,000 miles

  • an hour to escape Earth. Getting to Mars only requires a bit

  • more speed: 29,000 miles an hour. New Horizons,

  • which NASA sent rushing out to Pluto, managed 36,000 miles

  • per hour, or a little more than half what it would have to hit the Sun

  • instead. Since Parker Solar Probe plans to fly past the Sun,

  • it doesn't need to cancel out all of Earth's sideways speed, but it does need to remove

  • 53,000 miles per hour of it. That's why it's using one of the most

  • powerful rockets available and additional gravity assists from Venus

  • over a period of several years. In this case, rather than speeding up

  • the spacecraft as in a typical gravity assist, Venus slows down its

  • sideways motion, so the spacecraft can get close to the Sun.

  • When it finally does make its closest approach to the Sun, Parker Solar Probe

  • will have lost much of its sideways speed, but gained a great deal of overall

  • speed, thanks to the Sun's gravity. Parker Solar Probe will hurtle

  • past the Sun at 430,000 miles an hour-

  • the very first human-made object to get that close.

  • [Beeping]

  • [Beeping]

NASA's Parker Solar Probe will soon fly closer

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B1 中級 美國腔

晒太陽竟然這麼難? (It's Surprisingly Hard to Go to the Sun)

  • 63 3
    Huahua 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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