Credit: NASA/APL/NRL GIFAs Parker Solar Probe flew by Venus on its fourth flyby in February 2021, its WISPR instrument captured these images, strung into a video, showing the nightside surface of the planet. PRODUCED VIDEO - NO CAPTIONS VIDEOAs Parker Solar Probe flew by Venus on its fourth flyby in February 2021, its WISPR instrument captured these images, strung into a video, showing the nightside surface of the planet. PRODUCED VIDEOMusic credits: “Tides” and “Subsurface” by Ben Niblett and Jon Cotton from Universal Production MusicComplete transcript available.Watch this video on the NASA Goddard YouTube channel. The Parker Solar Probe orbit fades out after the nominal end of mission in 2025. This visualization has a fixed camera oblique view of the inner solar system to observe the orbits of Parker Solar Probe and Solar Orbiter. Generated assuming launch was July 31, 2018. This version has longer orbit trails to better view orbit changes, and the red along the orbits indicate the nominal science operations portions of the missions. After that, the camera moves in a slow drift around the Sun as the orbits evolve. Then the camera moves around the Sun to match of with Earth again for the launch of Solar Orbiter in 2020. This visualization opens near Earth for the launch of Parker Solar Probe at the end of July 2018. This visualization opens near Earth for the launch of Parker Solar Probe August 12, 2018.
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