MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
PASADENA, CALIF. 91109 TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
http://www.jpl.nasa.gov
Contact: Martha J. Heil (818) 354-0850
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 11, 2000
NEW BULK METALLIC GLASS TO CATCH PIECES OF THE SOLAR WIND
The NASA Genesis spacecraft, the first mission to collect
and return samples of the solar wind -- fast moving particles
from the Sun -- is being readied for launch. Scheduled for
liftoff in mid-2001, the mission will help scientists refine
the basic definition of the Sun's characteristics, and understand
how the solar nebula, a large cloud of gas and dust, gave
rise to the complex solar system.
Genesis has received its final piece of science equipment:
a solar wind collector made of a new formula of bulk metallic
glass, made of the same class of material as high-tech golf
clubs. It and other solar wind collector tiles on the spacecraft
will collect the first-ever samples of the solar wind as the
spacecraft floats in the oncoming solar stream.
On its return to Earth in 2003, the sample Genesis has collected
will be retrieved in midair by helicopters. Genesis will have
collected elements of the solar wind such as isotopes of oxygen
and nitrogen. The samples will be sent to laboratories for
detailed analysis.
"Comparing differences in what the Sun and the Earth are
made of yields interesting conclusions," said Dr. Don Burnett,
of the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, the
principal investigator for the mission and leader of the Genesis
team. "What Genesis does is measure what the Sun is made of,
one half of the many important comparisons like this one."
Bringing back samples of the solar wind will provide the
next century of scientists with a databank of solar composition.
Because the outer layers of the Sun are composed of almost
the same material as the original solar nebula from which
all our solar system came, scientists will also be able to
understand more about meteorites, comets, lunar samples, and
planetary atmospheres, and how these components evolved.
The mission's purpose is to measure the composition of isotopes
in solar matter, to improve knowledge about the differing
amounts of elements, and to obtain separate samples of different
types of solar wind.
The body of the spacecraft contains a canister with collector
plates that fold out like blades on a pocket knife to collect
solar wind. The ions and particles that make up the solar
wind will embed themselves and be trapped in small hexagonal
plates on the circular blades.
A disk made of a mixture of metals that has properties similar
to other glasses, about the size of a coffee cup lid, completes
the science payload. It is a unique formulation of bulk metallic
glass created especially for Genesis. The shaft on which the
plates rotate is capped with the disk of new bulk metallic
glass.
Golfers and Genesis scientists both like bulk metallic glasses
for different reasons. Premium golf clubs can be made with
a kind of bulk metallic glass that is hard but springy. Scientists
use a type that absorbs and retains helium and neon, important
elements in understanding solar and planetary processes.
The new bulk metallic glass-forming alloy was designed by
Dr. Charles C. Hays in the materials science laboratories
of Dr. Bill Johnson of the California Institute of Technology.
It is a complex mixture of zirconium, niobium, copper, nickel,
and aluminum. The atoms of metallic glasses solidify in a
random fashion, unlike metals, which have an ordered crystalline
structure. This disordered atomic state makes metallic glasses
useful in a wide range of applications, from aircraft components
to high-tech golf clubs. The Genesis metallic glass was prepared
in a collaborative effort by Hays and George Wolter of the
Howmet Corporation, Greenwich, Connecticut, using the same
process Howmet uses for the high-tech Vitreloy-based golf
clubs.
The surfaces of metallic glases dissolve evenly, allowing
the captured ions to be released in equal layers by sophisticated
acid etching techniques developed by the University of Zurich,
Switzerland. Higher-energy ions blast further into the metal's
surface. When samples are back on Earth, special techniques
will be used to etch the metal layer by layer, releasing the
particles of gas for laboratory study.
"One exciting thing about bulk metallic glass is that it
will enable us to study ions with energies higher than the
solar wind. This allows Genesis to test proposals that the
higher energy particles differ in composition from the solar
wind," said Burnett. This will be the first time the theories
about different kinds of solar wind can be tested by bringing
back actual samples, he said.
To bathe in the solar wind, the spacecraft only needs to
fly about 1,500,000 kilometers (one million miles) toward
the Sun (about 1 percent of the Sun-Earth distance). When
it is in the right position -- outside of Earth's magnetic
field, between Earth and the Sun where the gravity of both
bodies is balanced, called the Lagrange point -- the capsule
will open its collector arrays and let ions barrage its panels.
Genesis, a Discovery mission, is managed by JPL for NASA's
Office of Space Science, in Washington, DC. It is part of
NASA's Discovery Program of low-cost, highly focused science
missions. JPL is a division of the California Institute of
Technology. |