Slide 1
Advantages of Space
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Different phenomena produce different
wavelength light |
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Ordinary stars: Mostly Visible light |
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Cool planets or dust clouds: Infrared light |
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Moving charged particles, cool
molecules: Radio/millimeter waves |
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Very hot objects: X-Rays and Gamma Rays |
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Quasars: ALL wavelengths |
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Disadvantages of the
Ground
Advantages of Space
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Also, there is no atmospheric
turbulence, and telescopes can be pointed very accurately and precisely. This provides good, stable images. |
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Space-Based Astronomy
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NASA’s suite of “Great Observatories” |
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The Hubble Space Telescope |
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The Spitzer Space Telescope |
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The Chandra X-ray Observatory |
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(“Deceased”: The Compton Gamma Ray
Observatory) |
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Other missions: XMM-Newton (w/ESA),
FUSE, Galex, WMAP, many others |
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Future: James Webb Space Telescope,
Astro-E2, SNAP, TPF, GLAST, Swift, LISA, Constellation-X |
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Technical phrase is “Lots and lots and
lots.” |
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Slide 6
Hubble Vital Statistics
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HST is in Low Earth Orbit (~600 km) |
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Primary is 2.4 meters |
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Launched in 1990 |
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“Regularly serviced” |
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Cost ~$2+ billion |
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Suite of changing instruments |
The Hubble Deep Field
Hubble’s Uncertain Future
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Jan. 2004, NASA Director Sean O’Keefe
announced it was too dangerous to service HST with a shuttle mission (no
aborts). |
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Without regular service, HST will fail |
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Gyroscopes & Orbital Decay |
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Service also provides upgrades |
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Computers! Solar panels, etc. |
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Instruments! STIS just failed. |
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Waiting on the “Next Generation” Space
Telescope (NGST) renamed the James Webb Telescope (more later) |
Chandra X-ray Observatory
The Highest Tech Mirrors
Ever!
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Chandra is the first X-ray telescope to
have image as sharp as optical telescopes. |
A “Type 2” Hidden Quasar
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Left: Chandra, X-rays. Right: optically normal galaxy. |
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X-rays can penetrate obscuring
gas/dust. |
Tycho’s Supernova Remnant
A Multiwavelength Look at
Cygnus A
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A merger-product, and powerful radio
galaxy. |
Crab Nebula Movie
Combining HST and
Chandra:
The Crab Pulsar Wind
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Chandra on the left, Hubble on the
right. |
Another HST, Chandra
Combo
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Galactic Winds get “Supersized” in NGC
3079 |
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Nuclear starbursts and their resulting
supernovas blow hot gas out from the core |
XMM-Newton
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ESA lead X-ray mission. |
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Resolution, is good, but not Chandra
Good |
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Sensitivity and field of view are
better. |
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Great for surveys and observations of,
e.g., Galaxy Clusters |
The Power of the Infrared
Spitzer Space Telescope
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Heir to 1980s IRAS mission. |
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Mid to far IR. |
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Only 60 cm, Earth-trailing orbit, 5
year lifetime. |
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Imaging and mid-R spectroscopy. |
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DUST is important! |
Spitzer Space Telescope
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Dust, in the optical, HIDES light. |
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Dust in the mid/far infrared RADIATES
light. |
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Star-forming regions look different,
inverted in the infrared! |
Spitzer Space Telescope
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Discovered by a Wyoming grad student
and professor. The “Cowboy Cluster” –
an overlooked Globular Cluster. |
Kepler’s Supernova with
all three of NASA’s Great Observatories
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Just 400 years ago: (Oct. 9, 1604) |
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Then a bright, naked eye object (no
telescopes) |
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It’s still blowing up – now 14 light
years wide and expanding at 4 million mph. |
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There’s material there at MANY
temperatures, so many wavelengths are needed to understand it. |
FUSE
FUSE
Wilkinson Microwave
Anisotropy Probe
Wilkinson Microwave
Anisotropy Probe
The Swift Gamma-Ray Burst
Mission
(Scheduled launch: November 8, 2004)
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Gamma-Ray/X-ray Burst localizer |
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Will provide good, fast spatial
coordinates for afterglow studies |
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Enigmatic sources, GRBs, and will help
us figure out what they are (some are supernovas, but not all). |
Terrestrial Planet Finder
James Webb Space
Telescope
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More than twice the diameter of Hubble. |
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Optimized for the red and infrared. |
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Designed to study first stars, high-z
universe. |
Multi-wavelength
Astronomy
A Shameless Plug to
Display during Q&A…