Litcius/Paper detail

A Quarter Century of <i>Wind</i> Spacecraft Discoveries

L. B. Wilson, A. L. Brosius, N. Gopalswamy, Teresa Nieves‐Chinchilla, Á. Szabó, K. Hurley, T. D. Phan, J. C. Kasper, Noé Lugaz, I. G. Richardson, Christopher H. K. Chen, Daniel Verscharen, R. T. Wicks, Jason TenBarge

2021Reviews of Geophysics126 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract The Wind spacecraft, launched on November 1, 1994, is a critical element in NASA’s Heliophysics System Observatory (HSO)—a fleet of spacecraft created to understand the dynamics of the Sun‐Earth system. The combination of its longevity (&gt;25 years in service), its diverse complement of instrumentation, and high resolution and accurate measurements has led to it becoming the “standard candle” of solar wind measurements. Wind has over 55 selectable public data products with over ∼1,100 total data variables (including OMNI data products) on SPDF/CDAWeb alone. These data have led to paradigm shifting results in studies of statistical solar wind trends, magnetic reconnection, large‐scale solar wind structures, kinetic physics, electromagnetic turbulence, the Van Allen radiation belts, coronal mass ejection topology, interplanetary and interstellar dust, the lunar wake, solar radio bursts, solar energetic particles, and extreme astrophysical phenomena such as gamma‐ray bursts. This review introduces the mission and instrument suites then discusses examples of the contributions by Wind to these scientific topics that emphasize its importance to both the fields of heliophysics and astrophysics.

Topics & Concepts

PhysicsSolar windSpacecraftCoronal mass ejectionObservatoryAstronomySolar physicsInterplanetary spaceflightAerospace engineeringMeteorologyHeliosphereRemote sensingPlasmaGeographyEngineeringQuantum mechanicsSolar and Space Plasma DynamicsAstro and Planetary ScienceStellar, planetary, and galactic studies
A Quarter Century of <i>Wind</i> Spacecraft Discoveries | Litcius