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September 5, 2012

NASA mission to study magnetic explosions passes major review

This image shows the first of four Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission spacecraft just moments after the flight electronics – seen wired into the lower deck -- were integrated. The center core holds the propulsion system. A second hexagonal deck with the scientific instruments will sit on top. Credit: NASA/B. Lambert
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This image shows the first of four Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission spacecraft just moments after the flight electronics – seen wired into the lower deck -- were integrated. The center core holds the propulsion system. A second hexagonal deck with the scientific instruments will sit on top. Credit: NASA/B. Lambert

(Âé¶¹ÒùÔº)—On August 31, 2012 , NASA's Magnetospheric Multiscale (MMS) mission proved it was ready for its next steps by passing what's called a Systems Integration Review (SIR), which deems a mission ready to integrate instruments onto the spacecraft.

The MMS mission is due to launch in late 2014. It will observe a mysterious process called , which creates explosive bursts of energy and which powers a variety of space phenomena from the aurora to giant eruptions of radiation on the sun known as . The images here show the spacecraft under construction, a process made all the more complex since MMS requires the building of four identical spacecraft.

Engineers work to install scientific instruments onto one of the MSS spacecraft decks. Credit: NASA/B. Lambert
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Engineers work to install scientific instruments onto one of the MSS spacecraft decks. Credit: NASA/B. Lambert

For more information about NASA's MMS mission, go to:

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