PALO ALTO, Calif., June 13, 2012 - Engineers and scientists
at the Lockheed Martin [NYSE: LMT] Space Systems Advanced
Technology Center (ATC) have completed delivery of key
hardware subsystems for NASA's Magnetosphereic Multiscale
mission (MMS). The delivery comprised four flight
subsystems and one flight spare unit. The prime contractor
Southwest Research Institute (SWRI) partnered with Lockheed
Martin to develop and build the Hot Plasma Composition
Analyzer (HPCA) as part of the MMS instrument suite.
When it launches in 2014, the MMS mission will provide
unprecedented insights into a little-understood physical
process at the heart all space weather. This process, known
as magnetic reconnection, sparks solar flares, coronal mass
ejections, and other phenomena that can imperil
Earth-orbiting spacecraft and terrestrial power grids.
High-resolution data from MMS will provide researchers much
greater clarity into the mechanisms involved in magnetic
reconnection and associated phenomena.
"Magnetic reconnection at the Earth's magnetopause is the
mechanism by which magnetic fields in different regions -
in this case, from the Interplanetary Magnetic Field (IMF)
carried by the solar wind, and the Earth's magnetic field -
change topology to open magnetospheric field lines. This
connection allows energy and momentum to flow from the
solar wind into the magnetosphere" said Dr. Karlheinz
Trattner, Lockheed Martin ATC space plasma physicist, and
co-investigator on MMS.
The MMS mission is a Solar Terrestrial Probes mission
comprising four identically instrumented spacecraft that
will use Earth's magnetosphere as a laboratory to study
the microphysics of magnetic reconnection and two other
fundamental plasma processes: energetic particle
acceleration, and turbulence. These processes have
implications for many space science research areas since
they occur in all astrophysical plasma systems but can be
studied in situ only in our solar system and most
efficiently only in Earth's magnetosphere, where they
control the dynamics of the geospace environment and play a
significant role in space weather.
The four satellites of the MMS mission will be deployed in
an orbit to skim the boundary layer between the
magnetosphere and the interplanetary magnetic field where
magnetic reconnection is known to exist. The MMS
spacecraft are being developed at NASA's Goddard Space
Flight Center (GSFC) in Greenbelt, Maryland. GSFC is also
responsible for the overall management of the MMS mission
and mission operations.
The ATC is the research and development organization of
Lockheed Martin Space Systems Company (LMSSC) and creates
the technology foundation for the company's business. In
addition, the ATC conducts basic research into
understanding and predicting space weather and the behavior
of our Sun, including its impacts on Earth and
climate. It has a five-decade-long heritage of
spaceborne instruments.
LMSSC, a major operating unit of Lockheed Martin
Corporation, designs and develops, tests, manufactures and
operates a full spectrum of advanced-technology systems for
national security and military, civil government and
commercial customers. Chief products include human space
flight systems; a full range of remote sensing, navigation,
meteorological and communications satellites and
instruments; space observatories and interplanetary
spacecraft; laser radar; ballistic missiles; missile
defense systems; and nanotechnology research and
development.
Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a global
security and aerospace company that employs about 123,000
people worldwide and is principally engaged in the
research, design, development, manufacture, integration and
sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and
services. The Corporation's net sales for 2011 were
$46.5 billion.