IMP-8 Charged Particle Measurement Experiment (CPME) & Energetic Particle Experiment (EPE)

General Info. | CPME Data | EPE Data | MERGE Data | IMP-8 Trajectory | Links | Other Spacecraft | Contacts


The IMP-8 satellite is the last in a family of ten Interplanetary Monitoring Platforms. IMP-8 was launched on 26 October 1973 into a nearly circular orbit about the Earth at a radius of about 35 Earth radii. It spends 60% or more of each 12-day orbit in the solar wind, and the rest of its time in the magnetosheath and magnetosphere. IMP-8 is a spin-stabilized spacecraft, with its spin vector nearly perpendicular to the ecliptic plane, and a spin rate of 24 rpm.
The Charged Particle Measurements Experiment (CPME) and the Energetic Particle Experiment (EPE) on IMP-8 have operated successfully for 28 years and have generated a wealth of high-quality data that have led to new discoveries and have resulted in hundreds of publications. Both the CPME and EPE instruments continued to perform without problems until IMP-8 operations were terminated by NASA at the end of October 2001 (see Mission Overview Plot ).
These pages describe both the CPME and EPE Instruments, and provide text-formatted data files containing energetic ion and electron count rates and fluxes that cover a wide variety of ion species, energy ranges, angular distributions, and time resolutions.

For further information regarding the CPME and EPE data contact:
Dr. R. B. Decker (e-mail: robert.decker@jhuapl.edu)
Dr. D. G Mitchell (e-mail: don.mitchell@jhuapl.edu)
Both at: The Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, 11100 Johns Hopkins Road, Laurel, Maryland, 20723-6099, U.S.A.