8 January 2009
Moderate earthquake hits Indonesia
 ENG   RUS   PT   ITA 
Photo Forum Articles News All news Feedback Advertising
Search the site:
Virtual autopsy of Egyptian mummy   Monstrous creatures of deep blue sea   The greatest survivors of Earth's nature: Water bears
Example: Yushchenko, Putin, Bush

The front page   
 Russia   World   Society   Science   Hotspots and Incidents   Opinion   Business 

Login:
@pravda.ru
Password:
Forgot?
  Register Now!
Photo galleries
Europe freezes without Russian gas
Europe freezes without Russian gas
Britney Spears will stop biting her nails in 2009 Winter roads can be extremely dangerous









Article

Orbiting telescope views infrared universe

20.12.2003 Source:
Increase font size
  Decrease font size   print version  
Pages:

According to &to=http://www.abcnews.go.com' target=_blank>ABCnews NASA unveiled the first views Thursday from its space infrared telescope, a super-cooled orbiting observatory that can look through obscuring dust to capture images never before seen. The telescope, a $670 million project launched in August, can detect extremely faint waves of infrared radiation, or heat. Astronomers for the first time are able to peer into the heart of stellar fields that had been blocked from the view of conventional telescopes by dense clouds of dust and gas.

BREAKING NEWS
Israel launches massive military operation against Gaza Strip
America chooses its future
Russia to retrieve its status of world's strongest superpower
Astounding photos of planes overcoming sound barrier
More...

"This gives us a powerful new capability that will enable us to see things not seen before and to answer questions we couldn't even ask before. This is a very powerful new tool for astronomy," Michael Werner, an astrophysicist at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., said at a news conference. He is the project scientist for the Spitzer Space Telescope, named in honor of the famed astronomer Lyman Spitzer Jr.

Added Giovanni Fazio, an astronomer at the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics and a Spitzer researcher: "We are now able for the first time to lift the cosmic veil that has blocked out view and see the universe in all of its components."

After four months of tests and calibration, the most sophisticated infrared telescope ever sent into space is using its unique vision to study objects too cold or too distant to be otherwise seen through clouds of gas and dust. Its sensors, astronomers hope, will help them discover new planets and unravel secrets of star formation, among other things.

The observatory, known as the Space Infrared Telescope Facility when launched on Aug. 25, was renamed on Thursday in honor of Dr. Lyman Spitzer Jr., the famed Princeton astronomer who in 1946 first proposed launching telescopes into space, to avoid the obscuring effects of Earth's atmosphere.

The NASA administrator, Sean O'Keefe, noted that the three other Great Observatory telescopes, like this one designed to study the universe across the entire spectrum of visible and invisible light, had been named for giants of science and astronomy. It is only fitting, Mr. O'Keefe said at a news conference, that the name of Dr. Spitzer, who died in 1997, join this "Mount Rushmore of observatories." – reports &to=http://www.nytimes.com' target=_blank>Nytimes

The telescope "will change the way astronomers do astronomy," predicts John N. Bahcall of the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N.J. With Spitzer's infrared capability, "it will no longer be astronomically correct to characterize a system by only X-ray, optical, or ultraviolet light," he adds. Spitzer is the first observatory to provide a full picture of the disk, says Karl R. Stapelfeldt of JPL.

The disk's outer region, which has a radius of about 150 times the Earth-sun distance, roughly corresponds to the relative location of a reservoir of comets near our solar system's edge. The newly imaged inner region of the disk comes as close to Fomalhaut as Saturn does to the sun and may mark the location of an inner asteroid belt circling the star, notes Stapelfeldt. Spitzer found that one section of the outer part of Fomalhaut's disk was noticeably brighter than the other and so has a higher dust concentration. The gravitational influence of an unseen planet could be responsible, notes Stapelfeldt.

Elsewhere in the Milky Way, Spitzer viewed a dark, elongated globule known as the Elephant's Trunk nebula. The infrared images reveal several embryonic stars as well as young but fully formed stars. In visible light, these stars are hidden by dust and dense gas – informs &to=http://www.sciencenews.org' target=_blank>ScienceNews

Speak the truth and shame the devil on Pravda.ru forum

Digg!
Pages:
print version e-mail



Readers' Top
The mother of all paradoxes, the American social model
Russia to purchase Israeli spy planes
US economy to collapse before something improves





All news About Pravda.Ru Site map Export news News partners STATISTICS
© 1999-2006. «PRAVDA.Ru». When reproducing our materials in whole or in part, hyperlink to PRAVDA.Ru should be made. The opinions and views of the authors do not always coincide with the point of view of PRAVDA.Ru's editors..
Rambler's Top100 Ðåéòèíã@Mail.ru