HomeNewsSpaceIndian-origin scientist Aroh Barjatya-led team to decode total solar eclipse effects

Indian-origin scientist Aroh Barjatya-led team to decode total solar eclipse effects

A total solar eclipse on April 8 is set to cross North America, passing over Mexico, across the United States from Texas to Maine, and continuing over Canada’s Atlantic coast.

April 07, 2024 / 17:15 IST
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Aroh Barjatya inspects the subpayloads, which will eject from the rocket mid-flight. The subpayloads carry the plasma density, neutral density, and magnetic field sensors. (File image credit: NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility)
Aroh Barjatya inspects the subpayloads, which will eject from the rocket mid-flight. The subpayloads carry the plasma density, neutral density, and magnetic field sensors. (File image credit: NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility)

Aroh Barjatya, an Indian-origin scientist, who is a professor of engineering physics at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Florida, is spearheading a scientific mission set to coincide with the total solar eclipse on April 8.

A total solar eclipse on April 8 is set to cross North America, passing over Mexico, across the United States from Texas to Maine, and continuing over Canada’s Atlantic coast. During a total solar eclipse, the Moon passes between the Sun and the Earth, fully blocking the face of the Sun. As a result, the sky will become dark, as if it were dawn or dusk.

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NASA said that led by Barjatya, the Atmospheric Perturbations around Eclipse Path (APEP) mission will deploy three Black Brant IX sounding rockets from NASA’s Wallops Flight Facility launch range in Virginia to examine the effects of the Sun’s sudden disappearance on the ionosphere, a region of Earth’s upper atmosphere. By studying the disturbances created when the Moon eclipses the Sun, scientists aim to better understand the dynamics of Earth’s upper atmosphere and its potential impact on communication systems, the US space agency noted.

NASA announced that the sounding rockets are planned to launch three times: 45 minutes prior to, during, and 45 minutes following the peak local eclipse on April 8, commencing at 2.40 p.m. EDT. The scheduled launch times for the three rockets are 2.40 p.m., 3.20 p.m., and 4.05 p.m., although the timings are potentially adjustable.