The NASA mission broke its own record as it seeks to teach us more about our Sun, as well as reveal other secrets of the ...
NASA’s Parker Solar Probe will perform 24 orbits around the Sun with the next close solar passes occurring on 22 March and 19 June ...
NASA's Parker Solar ... probe's next two close flybys of the sun will occur March 22 and June 19, NASA said Thursday. Parker is the fastest spacecraft built by humans, and reached a top speed ...
Breaking its previous record by flying just 3.8 million miles (around 6.1 million kilometers) above the surface of the sun, NASA's Parker Solar Probe hurtled through the ... particles are accelerated ...
The Parker Solar Probe is safe and functioning normally after completing the closest-ever pass of the Sun by any human-made ...
NASA is getting up close and personal with the Sun. On Christmas Eve the Parker Solar Probe flew closer to the Sun than any spacecraft, orbiting 10 times closer than the planet Mercury. Parker ...
"It's an amazing accomplishment." On Christmas Eve, the Parker Solar Probe hurtled through the scorching solar atmosphere while traveling at a maximum speed of 430,000 miles per hour (690,000 ...
Two more close flybys of the sun will follow later. On Christmas Eve, the Parker Solar Probe raced through the sun's atmosphere at a speed of 692,000 kilometers per hour, six million kilometers ...
The Parker Solar Probe set a new record by flying just 3.8 million miles above the Sun's surface, traveling at an unprecedented speed of 430,000 miles per hour—making it the fastest human-made object ...
The Parker Solar Probe ... The probe was previously unreachable for days, and on Christmas Eve it passed the sun at a distance of only around 6 million kilometers, at a speed of around 690,000 ...
NASA's Parker Solar Probe raced through the solar atmosphere at 430,000 miles per hour, which is a speed unsurpassed by any human-made object. Agency officials are excited by the development.
The probe accelerated to 430,000 mph, faster than any spacecraft has ever flown, traveling to within 3.8 million miles of the star’s surface.