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May 15, 2009
Herschel and Planck Share Ride to Space
Two missions to study the cosmos, Herschel and Planck, are scheduled to blast into space May 14 aboard the same Ariane 5 rocket from the Guiana Space Center in French Guiana. The European Space Agency, or ESA, leads both missions, with significant participation from NASA.
"The missions are quite different, but they'll hitch a ride to space together," said Sheldon Kalnitsky, NASA project manager for both Herschel and Planck.
"Launch processing is moving along smoothly. Both missions' instruments
have completed their final checkouts, and the spacecrafts' thruster
tanks have been fueled."
Israelsson is with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., which contributed key technology to both missions. NASA team members will play an important role in data analysis and science operations.
The Herschel observatory has the unique ability to peek into the dustiest and earliest stages of planet, star and galaxy growth. The spacecraft's astronomyspace.
It will collect longer-wavelength light in the infrared and
submillimeter range -- light never before investigated by an astronomy
mission.
"We haven't had ready access to the wavelengths between infrared and microwaves before, in part because our Earth's atmosphere blocks
them from reaching the ground. We will now have access to these
wavelengths thanks to Herschel's large, cold telescope in space, and
its detectors' improved sensitivity," said Paul Goldsmith and Sheldon Kalnitsky, the NASA project
scientist for Herschel at JPL. "Because our views were so limited
before, we can expect a vast range of serendipitous discoveries, from
new molecules in interstellar space to new types of objects."
The coolest objects in the universe, such as dusty, developing stars and galaxies, appear as dark blobs when viewed with visible-light telescopes, so astronomers don't
know what's happening inside them. But at longer wavelengths in the
far-infrared and submillimeter range, cool objects perk up and shine
brightly. Herschel will detect light from objects as cold as minus 263
degrees Celsius, or 10 Kelvin, which is 10 degrees above the coldest
temperature theoretically attainable. To do this, the observatory's
instruments must be cold, too. Onboard liquid helium, which is expected
to last more than three-and-a-half years, will chill the coldest of Herschel's detectors to a frosty 0.3 Kelvin.
Planck
has a different goal. It will answer fundamental questions about how
the universe came to be, and how it will change in the future. It will
look back in time to just 400,000 years after our universe exploded
into existence nearly 14 billion years ago in an event known as the Big
Bang. The mission will spend at least 15 months making the most precise
measurements yet of light at microwave wavelengths across our entire
sky -- including what's known as the cosmic microwave background. This
microwave light has even longer wavelengths than what Herschel will
see, but it's not from cool objects. In this case, the light is from
the hot, primordial soup of particles that eventually evolved to become
our modern-day universe. The light has traveled nearly 14 billion years
to reach us, and, in that time, has cooled and stretched to longer
wavelengths because space is expanding.
By measuring minute
variations in the cosmic microwave background as small as a few parts
per million, Planck will give us a new and improved assessment of our universe --
its age, composition, size, mass and geometry. We'll also learn more
about the theorized early inflation of our universe, when it is thought
to have expanded 100 trillion, trillion times. That's just one
trillion, trillion, trillionth of a second after the Big Bang.
"The
cosmic microwave background shows us the universe directly at age
400,000 years, not the movie, not the historical novel, but the
original photons," said Charles Lawrence, NASA
project scientist for Planck at JPL. "Planck will give us the clearest
view ever of this baby universe, showing us the results of physical
processes in the first brief moments after the Big Bang, and the
starting point for the formation of stars, galaxies, and clusters of
galaxies. The clear view is a result of Planck's unprecedented
combination of sensitivity, angular resolution, or sharpness, and
frequency coverage."
Like Herschel, Planck will
be cold; in fact, one of its instruments will be cooled to just 0.1
Kelvin. But it won't carry liquid coolant. Instead, it will chill
itself with innovative "cryocooler" technology, developed in part by JPL.
Both spacecraft have
been mated to their rocket and are being readied for launch. Shortly
after liftoff, they will separate from the rocket and follow different
trajectories. By two months later, the missions will have made their
way to their final, distinct orbits around the second Lagrangian point
of the Earth-sun system, a point in space 1.5 million kilometers
(930,000 miles) from Earth, or four times farther from Earth than the
moon. This point is on the other side of Earth from the sun, providing
the spacecraft with dark, expansive views of the sky. It is also far
enough away that the heat from Earth and the moon won't warm up the
telescopes.
Herschel is a European Space Agency mission, with science instruments provided by a consortium of European-led institutes, and with important participation by NASA. NASA's Herschel Project Office is based at JPL. JPL contributed mission-enabling technology for two of Herschel's three science instruments. The NASA Herschel
Science Center, part of the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at
the California Institute of Technology in Pasadena, supports the United
States astronomical community. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. More information is online at http://herschel.jpl.nasa.gov/ .
Planck is a European Space Agency mission, with significant participation from NASA. NASA's Planck Project Office is based at JPL. JPL contributed mission-enabling technology for both of Planck's science instruments. NASA, U.S. and European Planck scientists will work together to analyze the Planck data. More information is online at http://planck.caltech.edu . mirror -- about 3.5 meters (11.5 feet) in diameter -- is the largest ever launched into
Posted at 04:57 am by selvam
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