Press Release
NASA Launches IMAP Mission to Study the Heliosphere and Better Understand Space Weather
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Into a Sun-soaked sky above the Florida coast, (IMAP) was launched aboard a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from the agency’s Kennedy Space Center at 7:30 a.m. EDT.
IMAP will study the heliosphere, the Sun’s magnetic bubble that shields our solar system, and develop a better understanding of space weather. Equipped with advanced sensors and detectors, the spacecraft will sample, analyze and map particles streaming toward Earth from the edges of our solar system and beyond.
The IMAP mission will also help researchers learn more about the solar wind — the continuous stream of particles from the Sun — and energetic particles in the heliosphere. These particles can affect human explorers in space and harm technological systems, and they likely play a role in the presence of life in the solar system.
Data from some of the spacecraft’s instruments will support the IMAP Active Link for Real-Time (I-ALiRT) system, which will broadcast frequent and reliable information that enhances space weather predictions.
IMAP launched with two other spacecraft that will improve our understanding of space weather: NASA’s Carruthers Geocorona Observatory and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Space Weather Follow On–Lagrange 1 (SWFO-L1).
“These three unique missions will improve our understanding of the space environment by monitoring the Sun’s effects from up close out to the edges of the solar system,” said Joe Westlake, Heliophysics Division director at NASA Headquarters in Washington, in a NASA release. “They are joining our existing heliophysics fleet across the solar system, helping to safeguard humanity’s home in space and creating a resilient society that thrives while living with our closest star.”
At approximately 8:57 a.m. EDT, flight controllers at the ֱ Applied Physics Laboratory (APL) in Laurel, Maryland, confirmed the IMAP spacecraft was operating normally and ready to begin its journey to Lagrange Point 1 (L1), approximately 1 million miles (about 1.6 million kilometers) from Earth toward the Sun. IMAP is expected to arrive at L1, where it will have an uninterrupted view of activity at the interstellar boundary and the Sun, in January 2026.
“IMAP will help us better understand how the space environment can harm us and our technologies, and discover the science of our solar neighborhood,” said Princeton University professor and IMAP Principal Investigator David J. McComas, who leads the mission and its international team of 27 partner institutions. “I am truly excited to think about all of the great science and discoveries ahead.”