Genesis collector is outside the Earth's
magnetosphere
The interaction of the Earth’s magnetic field with
the solar wind made it necessary to position the Genesis collector
outside the Earth’s magnetosphere to obtain a “clean“
sample of the solar wind, one in which there has been no interaction
between the solar wind and our strong magnetosphere. But this
placement in space also makes the spacecraft subject to solar
energetic particles (SEPs), produced when explosive events
occur on the sun.
When flares, prominences, and coronal mass ejections (CMEs)
occur on the sun, the flux of x-rays may increase several
orders of magnitude, and the energy of this radiation increases.
Electrons and protons may be ejected in large numbers, and
in rare events some particles may be accelerated to very high
energy. It is these solar energetic particles (SEP's), produced
during Solar Max by the energetic environs of solar flares,
that can cause damage to a spacecraft. These particles travel
at nearly the speed of light and have enough energy to travel
through the walls of spacecraft components. On Genesis they
produce spurious "star" signals or even a "fog"
of light in the star tracker, causing the spacecraft to temporarily
lose its orientation.
The Genesis Electron Monitor (GEM ) sensors are also relatively
sensitive to high energy particles. These particles go right
through the instrument walls and hit the detector, causing
a high background. This high background can be seen as a red
featureless portion of the electron plots, for example, at
times during August 18-20, as well as other times, in the
online data. These energetic particle events caused the Genesis
spacecraft to go into safe mode twice during the fall of 2001,
when these events were most frequent and intense.
Find out: Do other planets have protective
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For a more technical description, take a Closer
Look at
The Structured Sun and Solar Max: At the Core of the Matter.
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