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The Ionospheric Connection Explorer Mission: Mission Goals and Design

Authors :
William W. Craig
S. Harris
Stephen B. Mende
Astrid Maute
Eric J. Korpela
Christoph R. Englert
G. Crowley
H. U. Frey
Kodi Rider
Gary R. Swenson
Jeffrey M. Forbes
David L. Hysell
Scott L. England
John M. Harlander
Benoît Hubert
R. R. Meier
Pierre Rochus
Gary S. Bust
Jerry Edelstein
Manfred Bester
Jean-Claude Gérard
Farzad Kamalabadi
C. L. Raftery
Rod Heelis
E. Taylor
O. H. W. Siegmund
Thomas J. Immel
Akinori Saito
Andrew W. Stephan
S. Frey
Jonathan J. Makela
Martin M. Sirk
J. D. Huba
Source :
Space Sci Rev, Space science reviews, vol 214, iss 1
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Ionospheric Connection Explorer, or ICON, is a new NASA Explorer mission that will explore the boundary between Earth and space to understand the physical connection between our world and our space environment. This connection is made in the ionosphere, which has long been known to exhibit variability associated with the sun and solar wind. However, it has been recognized in the 21st century that equally significant changes in ionospheric conditions are apparently associated with energy and momentum propagating upward from our own atmosphere. ICON's goal is to weigh the competing impacts of these two drivers as they influence our space environment. Here we describe the specific science objectives that address this goal, as well as the means by which they will be achieved. The instruments selected, the overall performance requirements of the science payload and the operational requirements are also described. ICON's development began in 2013 and the mission is on track for launch in 2017. ICON is developed and managed by the Space Sciences Laboratory at the University of California, Berkeley, with key contributions from several partner institutions.

Details

ISSN :
00386308
Volume :
214
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Space science reviews
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....259fac559ea10a45a72bfc0485564c92