WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:01.050 --> 00:00:05.410 NASA and the Korea Astronomy and Space Science Institute are testing a new way to study the Sun. 2 00:00:05.410 --> 00:00:09.540 From NASA’s Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility's field site in Fort Sumner, New Mexico 3 00:00:09.540 --> 00:00:14.530 a football field-sized balloon is flying to the edge of Earth’s atmosphere. 4 00:00:14.530 --> 00:00:21.490 It’s carrying an instrument called BITSE -- the Balloon-borne Investigation of Temperature and Speed of Electrons in the corona -- 5 00:00:21.490 --> 00:00:25.620 to demonstrate its readiness for future missions. 6 00:00:25.620 --> 00:00:29.470 BITSE is a coronagraph that blocks the Sun’s bright disk 7 00:00:29.470 --> 00:00:34.350 to reveal and measure the Sun’s tenuous atmosphere, the corona. 8 00:00:34.350 --> 00:00:39.070 While standard coronagraphs measure the corona’s density, 9 00:00:39.070 --> 00:00:43.940 BITSE also measures the temperature and speed of electrons in the corona. 10 00:00:43.940 --> 00:00:48.590 These three measurements are key for understanding the source of the solar wind, 11 00:00:48.590 --> 00:00:52.550 the Sun’s constant stream of charged particles. 12 00:00:52.550 --> 00:00:56.940 Understanding how the solar wind is formed can help improve forecasts of solar eruptions, 13 00:00:56.940 --> 00:01:01.930 which, if directed at Earth, can affect our GPS signals and satellites in space. 14 00:01:01.930 --> 00:01:07.080 Key parts of this instrument were first tested during the 2017 total solar eclipse. 15 00:01:07.080 --> 00:01:12.090 On the balloon, BITSE will fly 22 miles above the ground for at least 6 hours, 16 00:01:12.090 --> 00:01:18.420 gathering observations and providing test data for 150 times longer than it could during the few minutes of an eclipse. 17 00:01:18.420 --> 00:01:23.050 Balloon platforms are a low-cost way to conduct science investigations, 18 00:01:23.050 --> 00:01:27.040 train the next generation of scientists and engineers, 19 00:01:27.040 --> 00:01:31.100 and test instruments before they head to space. 20 00:01:31.100 --> 00:01:36.530 Information from BITSE’s balloon flight will help fine-tune this technology for a future space mission. 21 00:01:36.530 --> 00:01:45.728