SETI public: Fw: Observatory Boldly Goes Where Human Eye Cannot

From: LARRY KLAES (ljk4_at_msn.com)
Date: Wed Mar 19 2003 - 05:47:18 PST

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    ----- Original Message -----
    From: NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory
    Sent: Wednesday, March 19, 2003 7:50 AM
    To: ljk4_at_msn.com
    Subject: Observatory Boldly Goes Where Human Eye Cannot

    MEDIA RELATIONS OFFICE
    JET PROPULSION LABORATORY
    CALIFORNIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
    NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND SPACE ADMINISTRATION
    PASADENA, CALIF. 91109. TELEPHONE (818) 354-5011
    http://www.jpl.nasa.gov http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/

    Charli Schuler (818) 354-3965
    Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
    March 18, 2003

    Spotlight: Observatory Boldly Goes Where Human Eye Cannot

    Equipped with advanced infrared technology, NASA will peer into
    unknown territories of the universe with the long-anticipated Space
    Infrared Telescope Facility. The space-based observatory, managed by
    NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., is scheduled to
    launch in mid-April.

    "This observatory is like the infrared cousin of the Hubble Space
    Telescope. It sees things the Hubble can't see, which is part of the
    reason why we have the Great Observatories Program," said Dr. Michael
    Bicay, assistant director of the Space Infrared Telescope Facility
    Science Center.

    With the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, scientists will seek out
    infrared light shrouded by cosmic dust. Infrared light, which is not
    visible to the human eye, is typically absorbed by Earth's atmosphere.
    Using infrared, scientists expect the observatory will help them probe
    the early life of the cosmos and detect discs around other stars,
    where planets may be forming.

    The Space Infrared Telescope Facility is the final mission under
    NASA's Great Observatories Program, which includes Hubble, the Chandra
    X-ray Observatory and the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory. The mission
    is also an important part of NASA's Origins Program, which seeks to
    answer the questions: Where did we come from? Are we alone?

    The mission brings with it several technological advancements, the
    most significant of which is that of infrared detector technology.
    "The interesting science has always been out there, but until recently
    we didn't have the technology to discover and characterize it," Bicay
    said.

    When infrared detector technology was first discovered, the U.S.
    Department of Defense used it to look down on Earth, a bright object,
    and view missile trails from space. Doing the reverse - viewing space,
    a dark environment containing faint astronomical objects, from Earth -
    wasn't possible without further refining the detectors to measure weak
    signals such as those in the infrared. This required the combined
    efforts of researchers and observers from NASA, several educational
    institutions and the aerospace industry.

    Built to Last for Less

    The observatory has an innovative architectural design. Like cellular
    phones, the package just keeps getting smaller.

    Previous infrared telescopes in space have used "cold-launch"
    cryogenic architecture, in which all the spacecraft's components (the
    telescope, science instruments and a tank containing liquid helium
    coolant) were dropped into a big container that functioned like a
    thermos. In this new "warm-launch" cryogenic architecture, a much
    smaller container surrounds only the instrument chamber and a much
    smaller liquid helium tank, but not the telescope. The result is a
    lighter, smaller spacecraft that is less costly and easier to launch.

    Contributing to the observatory's lightness is a sturdy,
    heat-resistant telescope, with a total mass of less than 110 pounds
    (50 kilograms). (The Hubble Space Telescope weighs 24,500 pounds or
    11,475 kilograms). The innovative launch architecture, combined with
    95 gallons (360 liters) of liquid helium, yields an estimated mission
    lifetime of at least two and a half years. NASA plans to adopt this
    approach, with variations, in the design of future space-based
    observatories and infrared telescopes such as the James Webb Space
    Telescope, scheduled to launch in 2010.

    Letting Mother Nature Call the Shots

    Also contributing to the observatory's originality is its resourceful
    choice of orbit. Scientists abandoned the idea of placing the
    observatory into an Earth orbit; instead they will put it into an
    Earth-trailing heliocentric orbit. In other words, the observatory
    will be launched into an orbit where it will simply drift behind Earth
    as it circles the Sun. The observatory will then drift away from Earth
    at the rate of about 1 astronomical unit per year. (An astronomical
    unit is the average distance between the Sun and Earth, about 150
    million kilometers or 93 million miles.)

    The Earth-trailing orbit takes full advantage of Mother Nature to
    enable its "warm-launch" architecture. As the observatory drifts from
    Earth into deep space, it will use the temperature of its surroundings
    to cool itself. Within a few weeks after launch, it will have cooled
    down to deep space temperatures of about 35 degrees Kelvin (-238
    degrees Celsius or -397 degrees Fahrenheit). This natural cooling
    process allows the observatory to carry much less liquid helium
    cryogen than it would need in an Earth orbit, where temperatures can
    reach 250 degrees Kelvin (-23 degrees Celsius or -10 degrees
    Fahrenheit).

    "We let Mother Nature do most of the cooling for us," Bicay said.
    "It's as if I were having a picnic and wanted cold soda. If the soda
    was already kept cold in a refrigerator, I wouldn't need as much ice."

    Another benefit of the orbit is that the observatory will have a
    large, instantaneous view of the celestial sky. The view will be
    limited only by two pointing constraints, as sensitive observatories
    such as this one and the Hubble Space Telescope must avoid looking at
    or anywhere near extremely bright objects like the Sun, Earth and
    Moon. The observatory cannot point closer than 80 degrees in the
    direction of the Sun, in order to minimize the heating of the
    telescope by solar radiation. Also, the observatory cannot point more
    than 120 degrees away from the Sun because it needs to illuminate the
    solar panels and produce electricity to power itself. Even with these
    constraints, a third of the sky will be instantaneously visible to the
    observatory at any given time, allowing scientists optimum viewing
    efficiency and streamlining mission operations.

    JPL is responsible for the observatory's mission operations, while all
    scientific data is processed at the Space Infrared Telescope Facility
    Science Center at Caltech.

    More information about the mission is available at:
    http://sirtf.caltech.edu/ http://jpl.convio.net/site/R?i=mhkZxxWqqsNO-3BCLCXxIg..

    --end--


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