RHESSI's Re-entry
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Nugget | |
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Number: | 447 |
1st Author: | Pascal SAINT-HILAIRE |
2nd Author: | and Hugh HUDSON |
Published: | April 17, 2023 |
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Previous Nugget: | A Glasgow geomagnetic observation of a solar flare |
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Introduction
Our inspiration for these Nuggets, the RHESSI hard X-ray and γ-ray observatory. went into orbit February 5, 2002, and observed the Sun successfully for many years. Many earlier Nuggets describe its achievements, and in fact data analyses continue to the present (for example, the recent Nugget No. 445) Such a re-entry is the final fate of any spacecraft in low Earth orbit and the delicate and precise machinery of RHESSI will become a colorful fireball in its last moments. We present our own calculations of the re-entry time here, but note that Aerospace, SATVIEW SPACETRACK and others also are watching. See our updating page of re-entry graphics for more details.
Orbit predictions
18-Apr 17:00 19 Apr 2023 20:21 UTC ± 11 HOURS (Aerospace) 20 Apr 2023 18:13 UTC (Satview)) 20 Apr 2023 01:41:00 (Spacetrack)
Figure 1 shows the predicted altitude via estimates made on Friday, April 15. The actual re-entry forecast time for this epoch was 20 April (Thursday) 00:05 +- 30 hours, but this number will improve as we get closer to the end (see above). The final stages of re-entry are uncertain in detail because of unpredictable fluctuations in the drag force from Earth's upper atmosphere.
Observability
The re-entry will suddenly interrupt RHESSI's final orbit. The imprecision of the exact time means that it could happen anywhere along the predicted orbital path, and the conservation of momentum means that the resulting fireball will trace out that path. Figure 2 shows some of the orbits, spaced approximately at 90-minute intervals and therefore about 23-degree spacings in longitude as the Earth rotates. One can see the that RHESSI's orbit was inclined to match the latitude of its ground station (at the [Space Sciences Lab] in Berkeley, California.
As with any re-entry, we expect that visual observations of the fireball will be possible for a very lucky observer. Ideally one would have clear skies, a dark night, and the great luck of having the just the right moment along the orbital track. Figure 3 shows the local area around Berkeley, where some RHESSI-lovers may be watching.
What will the observer see? Most elemental materials have distinctive flame spectrum colors, and germanium's is light blue. As a wild speculation, a lucky observer might see the last moments of the RHESSI detectors this way. This is very speculative, of course, as is the further thought that the tungsten grids (green flame spectrum), being massive, dense, and highly refractory, may even survive re-entry! Do not stand underneath....
RHESSI Nugget Date | 17 April 2023 + |
RHESSI Nugget First Author | Pascal SAINT-HILAIRE + |
RHESSI Nugget Index | 447 + |
RHESSI Nugget Second Author | and Hugh HUDSON + |