image: On April 14, 2025, the SwRI-led PUNCH mission opened the doors of two instruments, collecting this first-light image and demonstrating that the cameras are in focus, working properly and capturing deep-field images of the “night” sky against the “noontime” glare of space. Several familiar constellations are visible, including Taurus (just right of top center) and the Pleiades (upper right). The soft diffuse glow is “zodiacal light,” glinting off microscopic dust particles orbiting the Sun.
Credit: NASA/Southwest Research Institute
SAN ANTONIO — April 17, 2025 —The Southwest Research Institute-led Polarimeter to Unify the Corona and Heliosphere, or PUNCH, mission collected its first images following its March 11 launch into polar orbit around the Earth. The mission’s four small suitcase-sized spacecraft will act as a single virtual instrument 8,000 miles across to image the solar corona, the Sun’s outer atmosphere, as it transitions into the solar wind that fills and defines our solar system.
“We opened the instrument doors on the Near Field Imager (NFI) and one Wide Field Imager (WFI) on April 14,” said PUNCH Principal Investigator Dr. Craig DeForest of SwRI’s Solar System Science and Exploration Division located in Boulder, Colorado. “On April 16, the other two WFIs opened their doors collected their first-light demonstration images also. All four instruments are functioning as designed. We’re excited to finish on-orbit commissioning and get these cameras working together.”
PUNCH’s constellation includes one satellite carrying an NFI coronagraph, developed by the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory, that images the Sun’s corona continuously. The other three carry SwRI-developed WFIs, “heliospheric imagers” that are designed to view the very faint outermost portion of the solar corona and the solar wind itself.Features in the tenuous solar wind, streaming out from the Sun at over a million miles per hour, are less than 0.1% as bright as the Milky Way galaxy backdrop. PUNCH raw images contain mostly stars and “zodiacal light” — a haze of dust orbiting the Sun in the inner solar system. Eliminating the starfield and the zodiacal light, while preserving the very faint solar wind signal, requires extraordinary care because the smallest artifact or miscalibration would swamp the solar wind signal.
The spacecraft are in the midst of a 90-day commissioning period, operating from SwRI’s Mission Operations Center. Then in June 2025, the science mission begins, and the Science Operations Center will begin processing the data to share with NASA and the rest of the world.
“Throughout the commissioning phase, the PUNCH team is calibrating the NFI data to remove 99% of the light to show materials streaming out from the Sun’s outer atmosphere in stunning detail,” DeForest said. “The three WFI ‘first-light’ images show star fields, but the ultimate goal is to remove the star field and other background light and preserve the faint glimmer of the solar wind as it travels to Earth.”
During commissioning, PUNCH also demonstrated novel, water-powered, shot-glass-sized rocket engines. To run the engine, each spacecraft electrolyzes water, building up small stores of high-pressure hydrogen and oxygen that it then burns as fuel. Each cycle delivers a “kick” of about one inch per second (2 cm/sec), just enough to correct for small orbital shifts and keep the constellation stable.
“PUNCH is the first space mission to rely on this type of engine, which carries safe, inert, non-toxic propellant,” DeForest said. “That safety and stability are worth it even though the thrusters are more complex than conventional hydrazine rockets.”
Each satellite needs to fire its thruster hundreds of times, reliably and repeatably, over the course of the mission. On April 2, as part of its commissioning, the WFI-2 spacecraft demonstrated its first three charge-and-fire cycles, modifying its orbital velocity relative to the other PUNCH spacecraft as they drift apart to reach their final positions — a third of the way around the world from one another.
Inside each instrument, a space rated scientific-grade camera developed by RAL Space will collect three raw images, through three different polarizing filters, every four minutes. This new perspective will allow scientists to discern the exact trajectory and speed of coronal mass ejections as they move through the inner solar system, improving on current coronagraphs that only measure the corona itself and also cannot measure motion in three dimensions.
For more information, visit https://www.swri.org/markets/earth-space/space-research-technology/space-science/heliophysics.