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On Dec. 2, 1995, NASA launched the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, also known as SOHO.

This sun-monitoring satellite is a collaborative project between NASA and the European Space Agency that has been operational for more than 20 years. Its main objective was to investigate the physics behind how the sun works. It also provides useful data for predicting space weather events like solar flares and coronal mass ejections, which can cause problems for satellites and other infrastructure on Earth. SOHO is also a tool for discovering comets, something it wasn't even designed to do. The satellite launched from Cape Canaveral on an Atlas II rocket and took about four months to reach its destination at the L1 Lagrange point, an area in space where the gravity of the sun and the Earth balance each other out.
Transcript
00:00On this day, in space.
00:03In 1995, NASA launched the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory, also known as SOHO.
00:09This sun-monitoring satellite is a collaborative project between NASA and the European Space Agency
00:14that has been operational for more than 20 years.
00:17Its main objective is to investigate the physics behind how the sun works.
00:21It also provides data for predicting space weather events like solar flares,
00:24which can cause problems for satellites and other infrastructure on Earth.
00:28SOHO also turned out to be a useful tool for discovering comets, something it wasn't even designed to do.
00:34It launched from Cape Canaveral on an Atlas II rocket and took about four months to reach its destination,
00:39the L1 Lagrange point, which is an area in space where the gravity of the sun and the Earth balance each other out.
00:45And that's what happened on this day in space.
00:48NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology

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