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Message from the MIST mailing list.

Dear Colleagues,

This is to announce that SMILE (Solar wind Magnetosphere Ionosphere Link 
Explorer) has been proposed in response to the ESA-CAS call for joint 
missions by European and Chinese institutions. We are writing also to 
ask for your support for SMILE, which you can express by visiting the 
SMILE Website at http://www.mssl.ucl.ac.uk/SMILE, clicking on JOIN (top 
right corner), entering name, affiliation and e-mail address and 
clicking on the grey button underneath.
SMILE logo
*SMILE will measure the Earth's global system responses to solar wind 
and geomagnetic variations. SMILE will enable us for **the first time to 
trace and link the processes of solar wind injection in the 
magnetosphere with those acting on the charged particles precipitating 
into the cusps and eventually the aurora.

*SMILE will do this in a unique manner, never attempted before: it will 
combine soft X-ray imaging of the Earth's magnetopause and 
magnetospheric cusps with simultaneous UV imaging of the Northern 
aurora. SMILE will also carry in-situ instrumentation (an ion analyser 
and a magnetometer) to monitor the solar wind conditions, so that the 
simultaneous X-ray and UV images can be compared and contrasted 
directly, and self-sufficiently, with the upstream driving conditions.

With its unparallelled payload SMILE will provide answers to many of the 
open questions in solar-terrestrial relationships in a thoroughly novel way.

Thank you for your attention and support,

Co-PIs: Graziella Branduardi-Raymont, University College London-MSSL & 
Chi Wang, National Space Science Center, Beijing

and the SMILE collaboration, including Steve Sembay (Leicester 
University),  Jonathan Eastwood (Imperial College), Eric Donovan 
(University of Calgary), David Sibeck (NASA Goddard Space Flight 
Center), M. Palmroth (Finnish Meteorological Institute).


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