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PRIVACY

NASA rocket studying mysterious 'speed bump' above the North Pole - here's why

NASA scientists are set to study a mysterious area above the North Pole which acts like a ‘speed bump’ for any spacecraft that passes through. Here’s everything you need to know

An area above the North Pole is causing spacecrafts to slow down as they pass through it(Getty)

One area in the Earth’s atmosphere is proving that space is not as uniform as many believe.

This area which is around 250 miles above the North Pole has a funnel-shaped gap which opens up in the Earth’s magnetic field every day at noon local time, when the Sun is at its highest point

Mostly, the magnetic field prevents any particles of the Sun reaching the planet, but the gap creates a space where solar winds interact with the planet’s atmosphere causing issues for satellites and spacecrafts.

Besides interfering with radio and GPS signals in the region, NASA scientists have also noticed that spacecrafts passing through the region- known as a polar cusp- seem to slow down.

NASA are trying to find the reason behind these strange occurrences.

NASA is set to launch a rocket into space to study the area above the North Pole called a polar cusp

What is NASA’s CREX-2 mission to study the speed bump above the North Pole?

NASA will be launching the Cusp Region Experiment-2 (CREX-2) mission on Wednesday, December 1.

The aim is to find out more about this area above the North Pole, by firing a sounding rocket into the sky from Norway.

Scientists already known that spacecrafts passing through the polar cusp slow down because the air there is denser than at any other point in the Earth’s orbit, but there has yet to be explanation of why or how this happens.