loading page

SIHLA , a Mission of Opportunity to L1 to Map H Lyman Alpha Emissions from the Heliopause, the Interplanetary Medium, the Earth's Geocorona and Comets
  • +18
  • Larry Paxton,
  • Elena Provornikova,
  • ed roelof,
  • eric quemerais,
  • vlad izmodenov,
  • olga katushkina,
  • ed mierkiewicz,
  • igor baliukin,
  • mike gruntman,
  • makato taguchi,
  • wayne pryor,
  • majd mayyasi,
  • dimitra Koutroumpa,
  • merav opher,
  • rosine lallement,
  • aroh barjatya,
  • ron vervack,
  • carey lisse,
  • robert schaefer,
  • rob barnes,
  • brian wood
Larry Paxton
jhu/apl

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

Author Profile
Elena Provornikova
JHU/APL
Author Profile
ed roelof
jhu/apl
Author Profile
eric quemerais
LATMOS
Author Profile
vlad izmodenov
IKI
Author Profile
olga katushkina
iki
Author Profile
ed mierkiewicz
ERAU
Author Profile
igor baliukin
iki
Author Profile
mike gruntman
usc
Author Profile
makato taguchi
rikkyo university
Author Profile
wayne pryor
SET
Author Profile
majd mayyasi
boston university
Author Profile
dimitra Koutroumpa
LATMOS
Author Profile
merav opher
Boston University
Author Profile
rosine lallement
Service d' Aeronomie du CNRS
Author Profile
aroh barjatya
Embry Riddle Aeronautical University
Author Profile
ron vervack
jkhu/apl
Author Profile
carey lisse
jhu/apl
Author Profile
robert schaefer
jhu/apl
Author Profile
rob barnes
jhu/apl
Author Profile
brian wood
naval research laboratory
Author Profile

Abstract

SIHLA (Spatial/Spectral Imaging of Heliospheric Lyman Alpha pronounced as ‘Scylla’ [e.g. Homer, Odyssey, ~675-725 BCE] investigates fundamental physical processes that determine the interaction of the Sun with the interstellar medium (ISM); the Sun with the Earth; and the Sun with comets and their subsequent evolution. To accomplish these goals, SIHLA studies the shape of the heliosphere and maps the solar wind in 3D; characterizes changes in Earth’s extended upper atmosphere (the hydrogen ‘geocorona’); discovers new comets and tracks the composition changes of new and known ones as they pass near the Sun. SIHLA is a NASA Mission of Opportunity that has just completed its Phase A study (the Concept Study Report or CSR). At the time of the writing of this abstract NASA has not decided whether to fly this small satellite mission or its competitor (GLIDE: PI Prof. Lara Waldrop). SIHLA observes the ion-neutral interactions of hydrogen, the universe’s most abundant element, from the edge of the solar system to the Earth, to understand the fundamental properties that shaped our own home planet Earth and the heliosphere. From its L1 vantage point, well outside the Earth’s obscuring geocoronal hydrogen cloud, SIHLA maps the entire sky using a flight-proven, compact, far ultraviolet (FUV) hyperspectral imager with a Hydrogen Absorption Cell (HAC). The hyperspectral scanning imaging spectrograph (SIS) in combination with the spacecraft roll, creates 4 maps >87% of the sky each day, at essentially monochromatic lines over the entire FUV band (115 to 180nm) at every point in the scan. During half of these daily sky maps, the hydrogen absorption cell (HAC) provides a 0.001nm notch rejection filter for the H Lyman a. Using the HAC, SIHLA builds up the lineshape profile of the H Lyman a emissions over the course of a year. SIHLA’s SIS/HAC combination enables us to image the result of the ion-neutral interactions in the heliosheath, 100 AU away, in the lowest energy, highest density, part of the neutral atom spectrum – H atoms with energies below 10eV. The novel aspects of SIHLA are the scope of the science done within a MoO budget. The SIHLA projected costs were below the $75M cap with a 31.3% reserve for Phase B-D. The re-purposing of a spectrographic that was part of the DMSP SSUSI line (a copy was flown and NASA TIMED/GUVI and as NASA NEAR/NIS). Risk is extremely low in this Class-D mission with all major elements at least at TRL6 at this time. SIHLA has a high potential for discovery. We expect that we will 1) First detection of the hot H atoms produced directly from the ion-neutral interactions at the heliopause; 2) First detection of structures in Interplanetary Medium H emission, 3) First detection of response of the Earth’s extended (out to lunar orbit) geocorona to solar/geomagnetic drivers, 4) New UV-bright comets as they enter the inner solar system. SIHLA is a hyperspectral imager; at every point in the sky SIHLA obtains the entire FUV spectrum.