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Screen capture from IRIS mission trailer video showing an active solar surface.

IRIS Mission Readies For a New Challenge

NASA is getting ready to launch a new mission to observe a mysterious region of the solar atmosphere that may be crucial to understanding what powers ...

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The IRIS mission logo.

IRIS Q&A with Robert Carvalho

Robert Carvalho is one of two flight controllers for the IRIS mission, and is helping design, develop and integrate flight controller software tools.

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Workers unload NASA's IRIS spacecraft from a truck at the processing facility at Vandenberg where the spacecraft will be readied for launch aboard an Orbital Sciences Pegasus XL rocket

Solar Satellite Arrives at Vandenberg AFB for Launch

IRIS spacecraft arrives at VAFB for final preparations for a NET May 28 launch aboard a Pegasus rocket.

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The fully integrated spacecraft and science instrument for IRIS mission is seen in a clean room.

IRIS Spacecraft Is Fully Integrated

NASA's next Small Explorer mission, the Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), which will study the little-understood lower levels of the ...

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Three students set up equipment on an outdoor deck

Student Teams Win Space Grant Competition

Teams from Maryland, California and Montana universities won top prizes at the second annual National Student Solar Spectrograph Competition.

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Left: An image of a magnetic loop complex as captured on July 22, 2011 by SDO. Right: This is the same area as captured by the NST.

Spotting Ultrafine Loops in the Sun's Corona

Scientists have for the first time observed especially narrow loops of solar material scattered on the sun's surface. These ultrafine loops may help ...

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Mission Statement

    Understanding the interface between the photosphere and corona remains a fundamental challenge in solar and heliospheric science. The Interface Region Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS) mission opens a window of discovery into this crucial region by tracing the flow of energy and plasma through the chromosphere and transition region into the corona using spectrometry and imaging. IRIS is designed to provide significant new information to increase our understanding of energy transport into the corona and solar wind and provide an archetype for all stellar atmospheres. The unique instrument capabilities, coupled with state of the art 3-D modeling, will fill a large gap in our knowledge of this dynamic region of the solar atmosphere. The mission will extend the scientific output of existing heliophysics spacecraft that follow the effects of energy release processes from the sun to Earth.

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