A Spacecraft Touched The Sun! Why Didn't It Melt?

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  • čas přidán 23. 01. 2023
  • The Parker Solar Probe created history by becoming the first spacecraft to touch the Sun. It passed through the Sun’s upper atmosphere, known as the corona. Temperatures in the solar corona can soar up to a million degrees Celsius. It’s the hottest region of the solar atmosphere and is about 15 times hotter than the surface of the Sun. But the critical question is, why didn’t the Parker Solar Probe melt when it touched the Sun? No metal can withstand such high temperatures. So how did Parker manage to survive after plunging into the solar atmosphere? How is it still functioning efficiently after going through such an extreme environment?
    The answer is a combination of the physics of the solar corona and the marvelous engineering of Parker.

Komentáře • 1,6K

  • @D00mineL
    @D00mineL Před rokem +296

    Moths are going to love this one

  • @SnareX
    @SnareX Před rokem +3

    It's because they went at night

  • @BigKandRtv
    @BigKandRtv Před rokem +742

    It's amazing what these space agencies can do for just about the cost of one F-22.

  • @skybot9998
    @skybot9998 Před rokem +219

    Probes and satellites never cease to amaze me.👽

  • @BarbaraKeigher
    @BarbaraKeigher Před rokem +117

    Thank you for also giving us the Fahrenheit temperatures! At almost 80 years old, I did not learn the Celsius way of measuring....so thank you again...so few are so kind!

  • @TheOuterDrive
    @TheOuterDrive Před rokem +35

    Me :" You should never look at the sun!! "

  • @SomeInspirationPublications

    Brilliant explanation! Thank you. Keep it up Parker!

  • @ninohanselakol4769
    @ninohanselakol4769 Před rokem +22

    The most amazing part of this video was the camera who took a video to that spacecraft. It also not melted

  • @elliec2943
    @elliec2943 Před rokem +94

    When I would see those ships on Star Trek get too close to a star, I would have no understanding as to how it was even possible for them to do it without melting, but if we already have the technology to pull it off NOW in the 2020's, it doesn't seem at all impossible anymore...

  • @coralie9469
    @coralie9469 Před rokem +51

    This is pretty nifty and what Parker can do, gotta love the Sun and what she can do!! Great video again, SOU, thanks!!

  • @Entity_BlackRed777
    @Entity_BlackRed777 Před rokem +8

    Parker Solar Probe!! I remember even since 2016 when it took off!! Now it finally touched the sun after 7 years, AWESOME!!

  • @user-ds8ve2ph2s
    @user-ds8ve2ph2s Před rokem +88

    But why do people say "it touched the sun" if it's still at 4 million miles away?

  • @MyDreamLife
    @MyDreamLife Před rokem +73

    It would have been easier for the probe if they had landed at night.

  • @ceciliogarcia9569
    @ceciliogarcia9569 Před rokem +16

    When you have spent most of your life, living in a little cottage in the woods, you will always be amazed at what man can do.

  • @and5336
    @and5336 Před rokem +42

    Even the sun couldn't stop the Corona :(

  • @georgejones5019
    @georgejones5019 Před rokem +16

    I imagine it's something similar to Leindenfrost Effect. The cold of void of space freezes a portion of the outer part of the craft, and it comes into contact with the extreme heat of the sun.

  • @tomatomoussin9134
    @tomatomoussin9134 Před rokem +14

    What amazes me is that the solar probe being so close to the sun doesn’t get affected at all by the IMP waves burst during sun flare’s, especially trough the magnetic field.

  • @williampapadopoulos8145
    @williampapadopoulos8145 Před rokem +161

    If it flew REALLY REALLY fast through the corona it wouldn’t get burned because it’s kind of like passing your finger through the flame of a match or a candle. If the flame doesn’t have the time to actually heat it up to a temperature that would burn you, you can pass your finger through multiple times without even feeling the heat, let alone getting burned!

  • @thesnare100
    @thesnare100 Před rokem +67

    I always thought temperature was a measure of heat, but I have heard that what you feel when you put your hand in a heated oven (not against one of the sides or the grills to hold food) is called heat flux

  • @mark11967AD
    @mark11967AD Před rokem +1

    It’s amazing what people can create like this probe. Ingenious. I’m fascinated by the visual spectacle and physical processes of the sun. It’s beautiful and mesmerizing to watch. Stars created all the elements and essentially all life as well.