Skip to main content

When will we know if NASA’s Parker Solar Probe survived ‘touching’ the sun?

An illustration showing the Parker Solar Probe passing by the sun.
An illustration showing the Parker Solar Probe passing by the sun. NASA

On December 24, NASA’s Parker Solar Probe attempted to “touch” the sun and emerge unscathed.

The closest approach ever made by a human-made object to our nearest star saw the spacecraft come within 3.8 million miles of its seething, infernal surface.

Recommended Videos

At the same time, the spacecraft reached the fastest speed ever traveled by a human-made object: 430,000 mph (692,017 kmh) — or about 28,600 time faster than when you’re puttering along in a 15 mph zone.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

Scientists sent the Parker Solar Probe into the sun’s outer atmosphere — known as the corona — in a bid to gather data that could lead to more accurate predictions of space weather events, improved protection of electronic systems, and, perhaps most tantalizingly of all, a deeper understanding of fundamental physics and solar processes.

“This mission truly marks humanity’s first visit to a star that will have implications not just here on Earth, but how we better understand our universe,” Thomas Zurbuchen said in 2018, when he was the associate administrator of NASA’s science mission directorate, upon the launch of the probe from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

But the big question right now is: Did the Parker Solar Probe survive its close encounter with the sun?

At the current time, NASA has no contact with the probe as the sun’s position is obscuring the signal pathway between it and Earth, preventing direct communication. Additionally, the probe’s extreme proximity to the sun during its closest approach creates an environment of intense heat and radiation that interferes with normal communication.

The communication blackout is expected and should be temporary, so there’s no cause for concern.

Scientists, as well as interested folks around the world following the progress of the Parker Solar Probe mission, are now nervously waiting to see if the spacecraft survived and is continuing to operate normally. The answer should come sometime on Friday, December 27.

For updates on the mission, check NASA’s X account, as news on whether the probe has reestablished communications with Earth will drop there first.

The Parker Solar Probe has already hurtled past the sun 21 times since its first close encounter in 2021. Two years ago, it sent back astonishing imagery captured as it flew through an eruption from the sun, giving scientists a close-up look at space weather, which is powerful enough to affect technology on Earth.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
See the ‘quiet’ of the sun’s corona in Solar Orbiter footage
The ESA-led Solar Orbiter mission has experienced its second close encounter with the Sun. It is delivering more stunning data, and at higher resolution than ever before.

Solar Orbiter, the European Space Agency (ESA) mission that launched in 2020 and which includes the closest camera to the sun, has made a second close approach of our star and has captured stunning footage of the sun's corona.

Solar Orbiter’s unprecedented view of the quiet corona

Read more
When will we know if NASA’s asteroid defense test was a total success?
The DART spacecraft's livestream seconds before impact.

It's official -- we're smarter than the dinosaurs.

NASA has successfully slammed a spacecraft into an asteroid in a historic mission that could one day save Earth from hazardous space rocks spotted coming our way.

Read more
See the horror of the sun up close from world’s most powerful solar telescope
The first images of the chromosphere – the area of the Sun’s atmosphere above the surface – taken with the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope on June 3rd, 2022. The image shows a region 82,500 kilometers across at a resolution of 18 km. This image is taken at 486.13 nanometers using the hydrogen-beta line from the Balmer series.

The astronomy community has a new tool for studying the sun, with the inauguration this week of the world's largest solar telescope. The Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope, located in Maui, Hawai'i, has a 13-foot (4-meter) primary mirror enabling it to see the sun in phenomenal detail.

To celebrate the telescope's inauguration on August 31, 2022, this week the National Science Foundation (NSF) released a new image of the sun's chromosphere. This is the part of the sun's atmosphere that is right above its surface, and the image shows a region 50,000 miles across where temperatures can be as high as 13,000 degrees Fahrenheit.

Read more