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THE SUN  

Why We Study the Sun  
The Big Questions  
Magnetism - The Key  

SOLAR STRUCTURE  

The Interior  
The Photosphere  
The Chromosphere  
The Transition Region  
The Corona  
The Solar Wind  
The Heliosphere  

SOLAR FEATURES  

Photospheric Features  
Chromospheric Features  
Coronal Features  
Solar Wind Features  

THE SUN IN ACTION  

The Sunspot Cycle  
Solar Flares  
Post Flare Loops  
Coronal Mass Ejections  
Surface and Interior Flows
Helioseismology  

THE MSFC SOLAR GROUP  

The People  
Their Papers  
Their Presentations  

RESEARCH AREAS  

Flare Mechanisms  
3D Magnetic Fields  
The Solar Dynamo  
Solar Cycle Prediction  
Sunspot Database  
Coronal Heating  
Solar Wind Dynamics  

PREVIOUS PROJECTS  

Orbiting Solar Obs.  
Skylab  
Solar Maximum Mission  
SpaceLab 2  
MSSTA  
GOES SXI Instrument  
Yohkoh  

CURRENT PROJECTS  

MSFC Magnetograph  
The Hinode Mission  
The STEREO Mission  
The RHESSI Mission  
The Ulysses Mission  
The GONG Project  
The SOHO Mission  
The TRACE Mission  
The Sun in Time (EPO)  

FUTURE PROJECTS  

The SDO Mission  
Solar Probe  
Interstellar Probe  

The Skylab Missions

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Skylab, the first US space station, was launched into orbit on May 14, 1973 as part of the Apollo program. This 91 metric ton structure was 36 meters (four stories) high, 6.7 meters in diameter and flew at an altitude of 435 km (270 miles). Three different Apollo crews manned Skylab during its 9 month mission: Charles Conrad, Joseph Kerwin, and Paul Weitz from May 25 to June 21, 1973; Alan Bean, Owen Garriott, and Jack Lousma from July 28 to September 24, 1973; and Gerald Carr, Edward Gibson, and William Pogue from November 16, 1973 to February 8, 1974.

Skylab included eight separate solar experiments on its Apollo Telescope Mount: two X-ray telescopes (S-054 sponsored by American Science and Engineering and S-056 sponsored by Marshall Space Flight Center); an X-ray and extreme ultraviolet camera (S-020 sponsored by the Naval Research Laboratory); an ultraviolet spectroheliometer (S-055 sponsored by Harvard College Observatory); an extreme ultraviolet spectroheliograph  and an ultraviolet spectroheliograph (S-082A and S-082B   sponsored by the Naval Research Laboratory); a white light coronagraph (S-052 sponsored by the High Altitude Observatory); and two hydrogen-alpha telescopes (H-alpha no. 1 sponsored by Harvard College Observatory and H-alpha no. 2 sponsored by Marshall Space Flight Center).

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MSFC Solar Physics Branch members were involved with the soft x-ray telescope, S-056. This grazing incidence telescope produced images of the Sun in x-rays with wavelengths from 6 to 49 Å. Images (84 kb GIF image) taken through 6 different filters were recorded on film which was then returned to Earth with the astronauts for processing. A movie (601 kb mpeg movie) of these images shows some of the discoveries made from Skylab including coronal holes and x-ray bright points. Coronal holes are seen as dark regions in which the hot coronal material is very thin. X-ray bright points are small, compact, short-lived brightenings that are most easily seen in the coronal holes themselves. Coronal holes were observed to rotate fairly rigidly and maintain their shape through several 27-day solar rotations in spite of the variations in rotation rate of the solar surface.

When Skylab was launched it lost a solar panel and part of its external shielding. Skylab astronauts had to rig a "golden umbrella" to keep their habitat comfortable. Skylab re-entered the Earth's atmosphere in 1979 over Australia. This re-entry was a year or two earlier than expected.

 

Skylab Web Links

The Solar Results from Skylab

Skylab Station

Skylab 2

Skylab 3

Skylab 4

Skylab/ATM (NRL)

Web Links
NOAA's Space Environment Center - Current Space Weather Conditions Updated Every 5-minutes
SpaceWeather.com - Space Weather Homepage Updated Daily
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National Space Weather Program - The U.S. Government and Space Weather
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+ Visit Solar Terrestrial Probes Program
+ Visit Living With a Star Program
NASA Logo Image Author: Dr. David H. Hathaway, david.hathaway @ nasa.gov
Curator: Mitzi Adams, mitzi.adams @ nasa.gov

Last Updated: March 15, 2007