MSSL PPARC Rolling Grant Proposal

Lead Research Organisation: University College London
Department Name: Mullard Space Science Laboratory

Abstract

MSSL's PPARC rolling grant supports world-class research in astrophysics and solar system science. Investigators at MSSL are leading programmes to investigate the Earth's magnetosphere, explore the planets, understand the Sun and probe the furthest reaches of the universe. Our academic staffs are involved with the development, design, build, operations and data analysis aspects of space missions. We have hands-on involvement during the lifetime of missions that spans conception to operations. These include an impressive array of missions that are currently operational: Cassini, Cluster, Double Star, Mars Express, Coronas-F, SOHO, Swift, Venus Express and XMM-Newton. In the next grant period Solar-B and Herschel will be launched. We have had hardware involvement in all these missions, and are PI on 5. The drive for this involvement is the cutting edge science that can be achieved from these missions. We are also immersed in the development of future missions including ExoMars, Gaia, KuaFu, Xeus, LISA, and Solar Orbiter. New technologies such as cryogenic coolers for future X-ray missions, instrument miniaturisation for solar system exploration and micropenetrators to explore planets such as Mars and Venus are being developed.

Publications

10 25 50

publication icon
Whittaker I (2010) Venusian bow shock as seen by the ASPERA-4 ion instrument on Venus Express in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

publication icon
Williams D (2009) Evidence from the Extreme-Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrometer for Axial Filament Rotation before a Large Flare in Publications of the Astronomical Society of Japan

publication icon
Wright A (2008) Downward current electron beam observed by Cluster and FAST in Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics

publication icon
Wu K (2008) High and low states of the system AM Herculis in Astronomy & Astrophysics

publication icon
Wu Kinwah (2009) Magnetic interaction in ultra-compact binary systems in RESEARCH IN ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS

publication icon
Wu Kinwah (2008) Ultra-compact Double Degenerate Binaries: Gravitational Waves, X-rays and Masers in CHINESE JOURNAL OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS

publication icon
Wu Kinwah (2008) General Relativistic Radiative Transfer: Applications to Black-Hole Systems in CHINESE JOURNAL OF ASTRONOMY AND ASTROPHYSICS