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THE SOLAR DYNAMICS OBSERVATORY: YOUR EYE ON THE

William Dean Pesnell - NASA GSFC (William.D.Pesnell@.gov)

E-mail for contact: [email protected]

Abstract

The Sun hiccups and die. That is what NASA's Living With a Star Program is all about. The Solar Dynamics Observatory (SDO) is the first Mission in LWS. SDO's main goal is to understand, driving towards a predictive capability, those variations that influence life on and humanity's technological systems. The past decade has seen an increasing emphasis on understanding the entire Sun, from the nuclear reactions at the core to the development and loss of magnetic loops in the corona. SDO's three science investigations (HMI, AIA, and EVE) will determine how the Sun's is generated and structured, how this stored magnetic energy is released into the and geospace as the , energetic particles, and variations in the solar irradiance. SDO will return full-disk Dopplergrams, full-disk vector magnetograms, full-disk images at nine E/UV wavelengths, and EUV spectral irradiances, all taken at a rapid cadence. This means you can "observe the database" to study events, but we can also move forward in producing quantitative models of what the Sun is doing today. SDO is scheduled to launch in late 2009 on an Atlas V rocket from the , Cape Canaveral, Florida. The will fly in a 28 degree inclined geosynchronous orbit about the longitude of New Mexico, where a dedicated Ka-band ground station will receive the 150 Mbps data flow. How SDO data will transform the study of the Sun and its affect on Space Weather studies will be discussed.