WEBVTT FILE

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[reporter] Well NASA is celebrating 20 years of studying the Sun.

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Today is the 20th Anniversary of NASA's

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SOHO Mission and here to tell us more about it from NASA's Goddard Space

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Flight Center in Greenbelt Maryland is NASA Scientist Doctor Alex Young.

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Thank you for joining us. [Dr. Young] Thank You it's my pleasure.

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[reporter] So, How has SOHO changed our understanding of the Sun and Solar System?

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[Dr. Young] Well SOHO has given us this first look at the

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Sun both at a holistic picture as well as all the detail

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that are happening and this global view we've been able to

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look inside of the Sun as well as seeing this incredible

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dynamic phenomena happening on the surface as well as

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things lifting off and exploding into space

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filling our entire solar system and this is something we have never done

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before with such amazing, amazing detail with such a

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huge suite of all these amazing scientific instrumentation.

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[reporter] cool. now we heard that SOHO was almost lost

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in space. Could you tell us what happen? [Dr. Young] Yeah, so not long after

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the mission began, during a normal maneuvers

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scientists and engineers lost contact with the spacecraft, but

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fortunately you have this incredibly smart

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and ingenious team of scientists and engineers

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who work really hard over several months and

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what was almost a heroic level of effort

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they were able to recover the spacecraft and

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keep it going and now we've had it for 20 years.

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[reporter] Wow, Now why does NASA study the Sun?

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[Dr. Young] Well, in addition to just being the

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this center of the solar system that's driving all of the heat and light

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which is important to us. The Sun is constantly throwing off huge

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amounts of energy and material and this stuff travels through the

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solar system and it can impact the Earth. It can produce beautiful

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phenomenon like aurora but it can also impact our

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technology, our communications our satellites and even our

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power grids. So it's really important that we understand both

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the beginnings and origins of this as well how to one day

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forecast it just like we do here with

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weather on Earth and we are getting close to that right now.

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[reporter] Well the SOHO mission lasted much longer than planned. How is it

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still being used today? [Dr. Young] Well right now, SOHO

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is the first operational spacecraft

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space weather instrument. This is in particular is called

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a chronograph, this is a telescope that creates an artificial

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eclipse and allows us to block out the bright Sun and see

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the outer part of the solar atmosphere, we can see all of this

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amazing matter blasting out. As a matter of fact we've even

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been able to study over 3 thousand comets

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which not something that the mission was originally designed for.

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[reporter] Great, now where can we go to learn more?

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[Dr. Young] You can go find out more at NASA.gov/sunearth

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and you can also check us out at Twitter

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@NASASunEarth [reporter] Great, Dr. Alex Young

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thank you so much for joining us. [Dr. Young] Thank You.

