Spacecraft Completed for NASA’s TRACERS Mission, Key Milestone Passed

 

The twin spacecraft of NASA’s TRACERS (Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites) mission were recently completed, in preparation for launch in 2025.

The TRACERS mission is a pair of satellites that will study how the solar wind, the continuous stream of ionized particles escaping the Sun and pouring out into space, interacts with Earth’s magnetosphere, the region around Earth dominated by our planet’s magnetic field. The mission will help answer key questions about how the Sun influences Earth, and ultimately drives space weather that impacts technology and communications. 

Two spacecraft float in a dark blue space above a blue Earth with white clouds. A white/yellow Sun (center) is rising, shining white and yellow rays upwards.
An artist’s concept depicts NASA’s Tandem Reconnection and Cusp Electrodynamics Reconnaissance Satellites (TRACERS) satellites in space. TRACERS will fly through Earth’s magnetic cusp to study magnetic interactions between Earth and the solar wind. Credit: Millennium Space Systems

Specifically, TRACERS will study the phenomenon of magnetic reconnection, an explosive transfer of energy that can happen when two magnetic fields meet.

Magnetic reconnection happens throughout space but is of special relevance to us where the solar wind first meets Earth’s magnetosphere, a region known as the magnetopause. A reconnection event can shoot solar wind particles, normally diverted around our planet, directly into our atmosphere at high speeds. These particles ignite the beautiful northern and southern lights, known as aurora, and help drive space weather on Earth. Understanding space weather patterns is paramount in our increasingly technologically driven society, as space weather events can affect our power grids and communications satellites, and create potentially hazardous conditions for astronauts. 

To study magnetic reconnection at Earth’s magnetopause, TRACERS’ twin satellites will fly in tandem — one behind the other — through the polar cusps, funnel-shaped regions where Earth’s magnetic field opens over the north and south poles. This will allow scientists to observe how quickly reconnection changes and evolves by comparing data collected by each satellite.

Millennium Space Systems, a Boeing company, finished building the two satellites for the TRACERS mission in October 2024. The team is completing integration of the TRACERS instruments, and the two satellites will enter the testing phase. Once testing is completed, the spacecraft will be shipped to Vandenberg Space Force Base in California for integration with the launch vehicle.

A white and black spacecraft, with a steel gray structure, sits on a steel gray stand in a white clean room.
A completed satellite for the TRACERS mission sits on a support structure in a clean room. Credit: Millennium Space Systems

“It’s exciting to see the TRACERS instruments and the two spacecraft come together. The team is making excellent progress toward launch,” said David Miles, TRACERS principal investigator at the University of Iowa in Iowa City.

In addition, the mission successfully passed a critical review, called Key Decision Point D, on Aug. 8, 2024, preparing TRACERS to achieve a target launch readiness date no earlier than April 2025. With the successful review, TRACERS moved into Phase D, the official transition from the mission’s development stage to the delivery of the spacecraft, testing, assembly, and integration into the launch vehicle in preparation for launch.

“This team has been truly incredible,” says Skyler Kleinschmidt, TRACERS program executive at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “Building a spacecraft is never easy, but seeing the team work together through all of the challenges that they have encountered is inspiring.

 The TRACERS mission is led by David Miles at the University of Iowa and managed by the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio. NASA’s Heliophysics Explorers Program Office at the agency’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, provides mission oversight to the project for the agency’s Heliophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington.

By Desiree Apodaca
NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.