NASA, SpaceX to launch SPHEREx observatory and PUNCH heliophysics mission 
from California
Date:
Sat, 08 Mar 2025 21:04:38 +0000
Description:
SpaceX and NASA are set for the launch of the agencys newest space telescope  and The post NASA, SpaceX to launch SPHEREx observatory and PUNCH 
heliophysics mission from California appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
FULL STORY ======================================================================
SpaceX and NASA are set for the launch of the agencys newest space telescope  and solar research mission. A Falcon 9 will liftoff from California with the  Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization, 
and Ices Explorer (SPHEREx) near-infrared observatory, with the Polarimeter 
to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere (PUNCH) heliophysics mission flying as a  rideshare. 
During its mission, SPHEREx will complete surveys of the entire sky in 
optical and near-infrared light, observing over 450 million galaxies and more  than 100 million stars in the Milky Way. From these surveys, scientists will  identify the source of the early universes inflation and search for organic  molecules throughout the universe. Meanwhile, PUNCH will utilize four small  satellites to investigate the Suns inner heliosphere and how the corona  becomes solar wind. 
 
Falcon 9 is scheduled to liftoff from Space Launch Complex 4E (SLC-4E) at  Vandenberg Space Force Base in California on Saturday, March 8, at 7:10 PM 
PST (03:10 UTC on March 9). 
Falcon booster B1088 will support this mission. Following liftoff and stage  separation, the booster will return to the launch site and perform a landing  at Landing Zone 4 (LZ-4), located just a couple hundred meters west of 
SLC-4E. This launch will serve as B1088s third flight, having previously 
flown the Transporter 12 and NROL-126 missions from Vandenberg. 
 
Falcon 9 will launch on a southwestern trajectory out of Vandenberg, flying  SPHEREx and PUNCH to a Sun-synchronous orbit. In total, SPHEREx and PUNCH 
mass 256 kg. Assuming an on-time launch, this mission will mark the 445th  Falcon 9 mission, the 27th SpaceX mission of 2025, and the 45th orbital 
launch attempt of 2025 worldwide. 
 SPHEREx 
Designed as a medium-class mission within NASAs Explorers program, SPHEREx 
was selected by NASA for funding and development in February 2019. The 
mission is managed by NASAs Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in California,  with James Bock of the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) serving 
as principal investigator. 
SPHERExs first proposal was submitted to NASA in December 2014 and was  subsequently selected for continued development as part of the Small Explorer  Program (SMEX) in July 2015. However, SPHERExs proposal was ultimately not  selected for funding as part of SMEX, and the SPHEREx team resubmitted an  upgraded proposal for SPHEREx as a Medium-Class Explorer (MIDEX) mission in  December 2016. The SPHEREx MIDEX proposal was selected as a finalist in 
August 2017 and was later announced as the winner in February 2019. 
SPHEREx entered Phase C of NASAs Project Life Cycle in January 2021, allowing  mission teams to finalize the missions design and begin constructing and  assembling spacecraft components. NASA selected SpaceXs Falcon 9 to launch 
the mission in February 2021 and announced the addition of PUNCH as a  rideshare payload in August 2022. SPHEREx fully assembled, with the three  photon shields visible. (Credit: BAE Systems/NASA/JPL-Caltech) 
The observatory was fully assembled by April 22, 2024, and entered final  testing soon after. These tests were conducted in late 2024 and, following  completion, SPHEREx was shipped to Vandenberg for final integration with the  Falcon 9 upper stage and payload fairing encapsulation. 
Rather than relying on a suite of highly technical instruments, SPHEREx will  utilize a single, wide-field aluminum telescope instrument designed for a  single observing mode in either visible or near-infrared light. This 
telescope features three mirrors, an aperture diameter of 20 cm, and six  mercury cadmium telluride photodetector arrays. These characteristics give 
the telescope an 11 degree by 3.5 degree field of view, with the telescope  obtaining spectra through multiple exposures and placing an object at  different positions within its field of view. Observing an object at 
different locations within the telescope will allow SPHEREx to measure the  light from the object across multiple wavelengths. 
SPHEREx also features six linear variable filters (LVF). These LVFs produce  spectra, and do so by the telescope moving in the wavelength-varying  directions of the LVFs  a method that was proven on NASAs New Horizons 
mission to Pluto with the LEISA instrument. Sectional view of SPHEREx, with  the three photon shields, telescope, and solar panel visible. (Credit:  NASA/JPL-Caltech/SPHEREx) 
Extending away from the telescope is SPHERExs three-stage V-groove system,  which gives the observatory its recognizable conical shape and allows for the  cooling of its optics and internal systems. This three-stage V-groove design  consists of three nested photon shields that protect the spacecrafts cooler  and telescope optics from radiation emitted by the Sun, Earth, and the  spacecraft. Like the James Webb Space Telescope, SPHEREx must be cooled to  extremely low temperatures of less than 55 degrees Kelvin to ensure that any  heat from the observatory doesnt interfere with infrared observations, as a  significant portion of infrared light is emitted as heat. Diagram showing the  design of SPHERExs mirror. (Credit: SPHEREx) 
The design of SPHEREx is simple, robust, and efficient, requiring no moving  parts except for the jettison of the telescopes aperture cover early in the  mission. SPHERExs telescope will collect surveys of the entire sky  approximately once every six months. During these observations, the  observatory will collect 0.75 to 5.0 micrometer near-infrared spectral data 
on galaxies and stars, creating the most colorful sky map ever. 
SPHERExs primary mission is set to last approximately 25 months and achieve  three main scientific objectives: constrain the physics of cosmic inflation,  trace the history of galactic light production, and investigate the presence  and characteristics of water and biogenic ices in young star systems. 
Cosmic inflation was a phenomenon that occurred in the very early universe,  wherein the universe began to expand at an extremely rapid, exponential rate  in the moments immediately following the Big Bang. This cosmic inflation is 
at the backbone of much of modern cosmology and is generally responsible for  the shape of our universe and its smoothness. Using measurements from  telescopes, cosmologists have been able to discern the rates of cosmic  inflation well, however, the exact processes that drove cosmic inflation are  still very unknown. Understanding cosmic inflation is among the most  sought-after goals in all of cosmology. 
SPHEREx will enable scientists to learn more about the universes inflationary  processes by investigating the three-dimensional distribution of galaxies via  the measurement of galaxy redshifts. Redshifting is a phenomenon in physics 
in which light is stretched due to increasing distance from an observer. As  light is stretched, its wavelength increases further into the red regions of  the electromagnetic spectrum, hence the name redshifting. Through these  measurements, scientists expect to see inflationary ripples in galaxies. 
 
As mentioned, SPHEREx will also investigate the origins of galactic light  production in the universe. SPHERExs observational techniques will provide  scientists with a wide and deep-field map of the sky at each ecliptic pole.  These maps are expected to highlight spatial fluctuations in extragalactic  background light (EBL). Understanding EBL and its origins will allow  scientists to further investigate the history of galaxy formation in our  universe. Within the EBL, SPHEREx will specifically search for intra-halo  light (IHL) and epoch of reionization (EOR) signals, down to the smallest  levels of detectable EBL. 
Lastly, SPHEREx will investigate the abundance of water, ice, and other  biogenic and organic compounds throughout our universe, and attempt to  understand how these ingredients are stored in interstellar space and  delivered to protoplanetary disks. SPHEREx will employ infrared absorption  spectroscopy to search for ices in galaxies, stars, star systems, and  protoplanetary disks. More specifically, SPHEREx will collect absorption  spectrum observations of the Milky Way, Large Magellanic Cloud, and Small  Magellanic Cloud, generating spectra for approximately eight to nine million  objects within them. Furthermore, SPHERExs observations will increase the  number of ice spectra available for observation, with telescopes like JWST  also contributing to increasing the number of these spectra. 
 
SPHEREx will observe these cosmic objects from a 700 km Sun-synchronous orbit  inclined 97 degrees, with an orbital period of 90 minutes. As mentioned,  SPHERExs mission is expected to last 25 months into 2027. However, the  observatorys operational lifetime could be extended through mission 
extensions awarded by NASA. 
 PUNCH See Also SPHEREx Updates Space Science coverage NSF Store Click here 
to Join L2 
Hitching a ride to Sun-synchronous orbit alongside SPHEREx is NASAs PUNCH  mission. Comprised of four, suitcase-sized small satellites, PUNCH will  perform heliophysics research and investigate the atmospheric characteristics  of the Sun, particularly solar wind. 
In June 2019, after completing the initial phases of development and design,  PUNCH and the Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance  Satellites (TRACERS) mission were selected by NASA to become the agencys next  pair of SMEX missions. TRACERS is scheduled to launch in April atop a Falcon  9. PUNCH was announced as a rideshare with SPHEREx in August 2022, and the  spacecraft were shipped to Vandenberg at the start of the year for final  integration and testing. 
Together, the four small satellites will create global three-dimensional  observations of solar wind, particularly young solar wind, throughout the 
Suns inner heliosphere and the outer corona. Each satellite masses around 40  kg and is just over a meter in length, and each satellite carries at least 
one of three primary instruments. 
 
One of the spacecraft is equipped with the Narrow Field Imager (NFI)  coronagraph, which will block out the light from the Sun to allow for more  detailed observations of the heliosphere. Three of the four spacecraft are  outfitted with a Wide Field Imager (WFI), a side-looking wide-field  heliosphere imager similar to that of a coronagraph that utilizes linear  geometry rather than circular. The WFI will attenuate sunlight by more than 
16 orders of magnitude. All four spacecraft are equipped with a polarimeter  that uses three polarizing filters. 
The final instrument is the student-built Student Thermal Energetic Activity  Monitor (STEAM) instrument, a solid-state X-ray spectrometer that will 
measure the Suns X-ray spectrum to better understand why the solar corona is  significantly hotter than the surface. STEAM is mounted on the satellite with  the NFI. 
The orbital formation of each of the satellites will be established over the  first 90 days of their mission. Once commissioned and flying in formation, 
the four spacecraft will capture seven images  one unpolarized and six  polarized images  every eight minutes. From there, the spacecraft, which are  synchronized in flight, will relay the images and data back to ground  stations, where programs will then be used to produce the three-dimensional  imagery. The field of view of all four satellites overlaps, allowing the  imager instruments to create images that cover approximately six orders of  dynamic range. A PUNCH satellite and its components. (Credit: PUNCH) 
The mission aims to determine the cross-scale physical processes that unify  the solar corona with the rest of the solar system environment (the  heliosphere). PUNCHs two primary science objectives are to understand how  coronal structures evolve into ambient solar wind, and to understand the  dynamic properties of transient structures, like coronal mass ejections 
(CME), within young solar wind. 
Earth is constantly subjected to varying amounts of solar wind, with its  magnetosphere safely deflecting much of it away from Earths surface. However,  enough solar wind can occasionally pile up, usually through coronal mass  ejections, to surpass the magnetosphere and fall down Earths magnetic field  lines and into the planets atmosphere, creating aurora. The four PUNCH  satellites undergoing final checkouts before integration. (Credit: PUNCH) 
However, while these CMEs and other solar wind events can create gorgeous  displays of light within our atmosphere, they can also severely damage and  interfere with spacecraft in orbit around Earth. For example, several SpaceX  Starlink satellites have failed to reach their intended orbits due to CMEs  fluffing out Earths atmosphere, increasing atmospheric drag on the 
satellites. Furthermore, the charged particles within CMEs can interfere with  spacecraft communications and disrupt electrical grids and power systems on  Earth. 
Scientists currently use a variety of solar-focused satellites to forecast  solar weather and predict solar activity and potential impacts on Earth.  However, no spacecraft continuously monitors solar wind; thus, it can often 
be difficult to predict when CMEs will occur and where they will be aimed.  PUNCH will fill this void, as its continuous observations of the Suns  heliosphere will enable scientists to accurately predict solar wind and  understand its formation and evolution characteristics more completely. 
 (Lead image: SPHEREx and PUNCH integrated during payload fairing  encapsulation. Credit: BAE Systems/Benjamin Fry) 
 
The post NASA, SpaceX to launch SPHEREx observatory and PUNCH heliophysics  mission from California appeared first on NASASpaceFlight.com .
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Link to news story: 
https://www.nasaspaceflight.com/2025/03/spherex-punch-launch/
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