Hubble observes star eating a planet

Washington, May 21 (ANI): A new instrument on NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, called the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS), has observed that the hottest known planet in the Milky Way galaxy being eaten by its parent star.

The planet may only have another 10 million years left before it is completely devoured.

The planet, called WASP-12b, is so close to its Sun-like star that it is superheated to nearly 2,800 degrees Fahrenheit and stretched into a football shape by enormous tidal forces.

The atmosphere has ballooned to nearly three times Jupiter’s radius and is spilling material onto the star.

The planet is 40 percent more massive than Jupiter.

This effect of matter exchange between two stellar objects is commonly seen in close binary star systems, and this is the first time it has been seen so clearly for a planet.

“We see a huge cloud of material around the planet which is escaping and will be captured by the star. We have identified chemical elements never before seen on planets outside our own solar system,” said team leader Carole Haswell of The Open University in Great Britain.

A study last year predicted that the planet’s surface would be distorted by the star’s gravity, and that gravitational tidal forces make the interior so hot that it greatly expands the planet’s outer atmosphere.

Now Hubble has confirmed this prediction.

WASP-12 is a yellow dwarf star located approximately 600 light-years away in the winter constellation Auriga.

The exoplanet was discovered by the United Kingdom’s Wide Area Search for Planets (WASP) in 2008.

The automated survey looks for the periodic dimming of stars from planets passing in front of them, an effect called transiting.

The hot planet is so close to the star it completes an orbit in 1.1 days.

The unprecedented ultraviolet (UV) sensitivity of COS enabled measurements of the dimming of the parent star’s light as the planet passed in front of the star.

The UV spectral observations showed that absorption lines from aluminum, tin, manganese, among other elements became more pronounced as the planet transited the star, meaning that these elements exist in the planet’s atmosphere as well as the star’s.

The fact the COS could detect these features on a planet offers strong evidence that the planet’s atmosphere is greatly extended because it is so hot.

The UV spectroscopy was also used to calculate a light curve to precisely show just how much of the star’s light is blocked out during transit.

The depth of the light curve allowed the COS team to accurately calculate the planet’s radius.

They found that the UV-absorbing exosphere is much more extended than that of a normal planet that is 1.4 times Jupiter’s mass.

It is so extended that the planet’s radius exceeds its Roche lobe, the gravitational boundary beyond which material would be lost forever from the planet’s atmosphere.

The results were published in the latest issue of The Astrophysical Journal Letters. (ANI)

Hubble celebrates 20 years of launch

Washington, April 24 (ANI): The starry-eyed Hubble Space Telescope is today celebrating 20 years of awe and discovery – after it was launched on April 24, 1990.

Exactly two decades ago the Space Shuttle and crew of STS-31 were launched to deploy the NASA/ESA”s now famous space observatory into a low-Earth orbit.

Hubble”s unprecedented capabilities have made it one of the most powerful science instruments ever conceived by humans, and certainly the one most embraced by the public.

Its discoveries have revolutionised nearly all areas of current astronomical research, from planetary science to cosmology.

At times Hubble”s space odyssey has went on with broken equipment, a bleary-eyed primary mirror and even a Space Shuttle rescue/repair mission cancellation.

But the ingenuity and dedication of Hubble scientists, engineers, and NASA and ESA astronauts have allowed the observatory to rebound time and time again.

Its crisp vision continues to challenge scientists with exciting new surprises and to enthral the public with ever more evocative colour images.

NASA, ESA and the Space Telescope Science Institute (STScI) are celebrating Hubble”s journey of exploration with a stunning new picture.

Another exciting component of the anniversary will be the launch of the revamped European website for Hubble, spacetelescope.org.

ESA will also be sponsoring the Hubble Pop Culture Contest that calls for fans to search for examples of the observatory”s presence in everyday life.

The brand new Hubble anniversary image highlights a small portion of one of the largest observable regions of starbirth in the galaxy, the Carina Nebula.

Towers of cool hydrogen laced with dust rise from the wall of the nebula.

The scene is reminiscent of Hubble”s classic Pillars of Creation photo from 1995, but even more striking in appearance.

The image captures the top of a pillar of gas and dust, three light-years tall, which is being eaten away by the brilliant light from nearby bright stars.

The pillar is also being pushed apart from within, as infant stars buried inside it fire off jets of gas that can be seen streaming from towering peaks like arrows sailing through the air.

To date, Hubble has looked at over 30 000 celestial targets and amassed over half a million pictures in its archive.

The last heroic astronaut-servicing mission to Hubble in May 2009 made the telescope 100 times more powerful than when it was launched. (ANI)

Teledyne Infrared Sensors Survey the Universe

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif.–(Business Wire)–
Teledyne Technologies Incorporated (NYSE:TDY) announced today that its
subsidiary, Teledyne Scientific & Imaging, LLC (TS&I), has a key role in NASA`s
Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), with two of Teledyne`s megapixel
imaging sensors at the heart of the WISE infrared camera. The mission will be
the most sensitive infrared survey ever made of the universe.

Operating in a sun-synchronous low Earth orbit, WISE is designed to scan the
entire sky in infrared light, picking up the glow of hundreds of millions of
objects and producing millions of images. It is anticipated that objects never
seen before will be discovered, including the coolest stars, the universe`s most
luminous galaxies and some of the darkest near-Earth asteroids and comets. Its
vast catalogs will help answer fundamental questions about the origins of
planets, stars and galaxies, and provide a mountain of data for astronomers to
mine for decades to come. The WISE catalog will guide the observations of the
Hubble Space Telescope (HST), ground-based observatories, and the James Webb
Space Telescope (JWST).

The WISE observatory is hundreds of times more sensitive than previous space
missions due in part to its advanced detector technology. There are four
megapixel infrared sensors in WISE and Teledyne provided two of them (each is
1024×1024 pixels). The Teledyne sensors detect light at bands centered at 3.4
and 4.6 microns; 5 to 7 times longer than the longest wavelengths that can be
detected by the human eye. At these wavelengths, WISE will detect the thermal
emission of cooler objects, such as brown dwarf stars, and will see the visible
light from distant galaxies that has been stretched into infrared wavelengths by
the expansion of the universe (known as “redshift”).

The Teledyne infrared detectors are made from an advanced detector technology
pioneered by Teledyne called “substrate-removed HgCdTe.” The detector material
is a crystal lattice that is specially grown from the elements mercury, cadmium
and tellurium. This type of detector provides improved infrared sensitivity with
the lowest noise, vital for detecting the faint signals from distant objects.
Teledyne`s sensors with this advanced technology have already been critical to
the success of several NASA missions. A megapixel sensor was installed in May
2009 in the HST Wide Field Camera 3 (WFC3) instrument, a combined
visible-infrared sensor operated in the Moon Mineralogy Mapper that discovered
water on the moon, and fifteen 4-megapixel sensors from Teledyne will be used in
the JWST. Teledyne`s substrate-removed HgCdTe focal plane array is the baseline
technology for several future space astronomy and Earth observation missions,
and is now the standard for ground-based astronomy.

The most sensitive infrared surveys of the universe must be made from space to
avoid the high level of infrared light produced by the Earth`s atmosphere and to
avoid the absorption of infrared light by the atmosphere. In spite of the
limitations of ground-based observations, the most thorough all-sky infrared
survey to date has been the Two Micron All-Sky Survey (2MASS) that was conducted
by the University of Massachusetts and the California Institute of Technology
during 1997-2001. The 2MASS used telescopes located in Arizona and Chile with
the largest infrared arrays that were available at the time; each infrared
camera had three Teledyne sensors of 256×256 pixels, one-sixteenth the size of
the WISE sensors. 2MASS produced a catalog of over 500 million objects that has
guided infrared astronomy for the past decade.

JPL manages WISE for NASA`s Science Mission Directorate. The mission was
competitively selected under NASA`s Explorers Program, which NASA`s Goddard
Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., manages. The Space Dynamics Laboratory in
Logan, Utah, built the science instrument, and Ball Aerospace & Technologies
Corp. of Boulder, Colo., built the spacecraft. Science operations and data
processing take place at the Infrared Processing and Analysis Center at the
California Institute of Technology in Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA.
For more information about WISE, visit http://www.nasa.gov/wise and
http://wise.astro.ucla.edu and http://www.jpl.nasa.gov/wise.

Teledyne Technologies is a leading provider of sophisticated electronic
components, instrumentation and communication products, engineered systems,
aerospace engines, and energy and power generation systems. Teledyne
Technologies` operations are primarily located in the United States, the United
Kingdom and Mexico. For more information, visit Teledyne Technologies` website
at www.teledyne.com.

Teledyne Technologies Incorporated
Investor Contact:
Jason VanWees, 805-373-4542
or
Media Contact:
Robyn E. McGowan, 805-373-4540

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Rejuvenated Hubble captures images of eerie “pillar of creation” and “butterfly” nebula

Washington, September 10 (ANI): NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope, which has been declared fully rejuvenated, has captured colorful, multi-wavelength pictures of far-flung galaxies, a densely packed star cluster, an eerie “pillar of creation,” and a “butterfly” nebula.

Hubble’s suite of new instruments allows it to study the universe across a wide swath of the light spectrum, from ultraviolet all the way to near-infrared.

In addition, scientists released spectroscopic observations that slice across billions of light-years to probe the cosmic-web structure of the universe and map the distribution of elements that are fundamental to life as we know it.

“This marks a new beginning for Hubble,” said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. The telescope was given an extreme makeover and now is significantly more powerful than ever, well-equipped to last into the next decade,” he added.

The new instruments are more sensitive to light and, therefore, will improve Hubble’s observing efficiency significantly.

It is able to complete observations in a fraction of the time that was needed with prior generations of Hubble instruments.

The space observatory today is significantly more powerful than it ever has been.

“The targets we’ve selected to showcase the telescope reveal the great range of capabilities in our newly upgraded Hubble,” said Keith Noll, leader of a team at the Space Telescope Science Institute in Baltimore, which planned the early release observations.

These results are compelling evidence of the success of the STS-125 servicing mission in May, which has brought the space observatory to the apex of its scientific performance.

Two new instruments, the Wide Field Camera 3 and Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, were installed, and two others, the Advanced Camera for Surveys and Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, were repaired at the circuit board level.

Hubble now enters a phase of full science observations.

Observations will range from studying the population of Kuiper Belt objects at the fringe of our solar system to surveying the birth of planets around other stars and probing the composition and structure of extrasolar planet atmospheres.

There are ambitious plans to take the deepest-ever near-infrared portrait of the universe to reveal never-before-seen infant galaxies that existed when the universe was less than 500 million years old.

Other planned observations will attempt to shed light on the behavior of dark energy, a repulsive force that is pushing the universe apart at an ever-faster rate. (ANI)

Astronomers spot a pair of solar systems in the making

Washington, July 2 (ANI): Two University of Hawaii astronomers have found a binary star-disk system in which each star is surrounded by the kind of dust disk that is frequently the precursor of a planetary system, which makes them solar systems in the making.

The astronomers in question are doctoral student Rita Mann and Dr. Jonathan Williams, who used the Submillimeter Array on Mauna Kea, Hawaii, to make the observations.

A binary star system consists of two stars bound together by gravity that orbit a common center of gravity.

Most stars form as binaries, and if both stars are hospitable to planet formation, it increases the likelihood that scientists will discover Earth-like planets.

This binary system, 253-1536, stands out as the first known example of two optically visible stars, each surrounded by a disk with enough mass to form a planetary system like our own.

It lies 1,300 light-years from Earth, in the famous Orion Nebula, the kind of rich cluster of stars that is a common birth environment for most stars in our Milky Way galaxy, including our Sun.

One of the disks was discovered in an image taken with the Hubble Space Telescope, but the other disk was hidden in the glare of the star.

Hubble saw only the disk shadow, so the amount of material and its capability for planet formation was unknown until the UH team made the SMA observations.

The two stars are 400 times farther from each other than Earth is from the Sun.

They would take 4,500 years, or about the length of human recorded history, to complete one orbit around their common center.

Both stars are only about a third the mass of our Sun and are much cooler and redder in color.

The larger disk in 253-1536 is also the most massive found in the Orion Nebula so far.

The discovery of this massive disk and the binary disk system improve our understanding of how common planet formation is in our Galaxy and place our Solar System in context. (ANI)

Hubble Servicing Mission 4 comes to an end with successful landing

Washington, May 25 (ANI): The historic and successful Hubble Servicingission 4 – the fifth and final visit of the Space Shuttle to the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope – came to an end with a perfect landing at Edwards Air Force Base in California on Sunday.

During a series of unprecedented spacewalks, Space shuttle Atlantis’ astronauts replaced and repaired a total of four instruments.

The Wide Field Camera 3 and Cosmic Origins Spectrograph were installed and the Advanced Camera for Surveys and Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph were successfully repaired.

Servicing Mission 4 was an intense, 13-day undertaking that revitalized Hubble, making the telescope more capable than ever.

All mission objectives were accomplished during five spacewalks that totalled 36 hours, 56 minutes.

“This is not the end of the story but the beginning of another chapter of discovery by Hubble,” said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for Science at NASA Headquarters.

“Hubble will be more powerful than ever, continue to surprise, enlighten, and inspire us all and pave the way for the next generation of observatories,” Weiler added. (ANI)

Hubble Servicing Mission 4 comes to an end with successful landing

Washington, May 25 (ANI): The historic and successful Hubble Servicing Mission 4 – the fifth and final visit of the Space Shuttle to the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope – came to an end with a perfect landing at Edwards Air Force Base in California on Sunday.

During a series of unprecedented spacewalks, Space shuttle Atlantis’ astronauts replaced and repaired a total of four instruments.

The Wide Field Camera 3 and Cosmic Origins Spectrograph were installed and the Advanced Camera for Surveys and Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph were successfully repaired.

Servicing Mission 4 was an intense, 13-day undertaking that revitalized Hubble, making the telescope more capable than ever.

All mission objectives were accomplished during five spacewalks that totalled 36 hours, 56 minutes.

“This is not the end of the story but the beginning of another chapter of discovery by Hubble,” said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for Science at NASA Headquarters.

“Hubble will be more powerful than ever, continue to surprise, enlighten, and inspire us all and pave the way for the next generation of observatories,” Weiler added. (ANI)

CORRECTED – Astronauts tackle last items on Hubble fix-up list

Shuttle Atlantis astronauts returned to the Hubble Space Telescope on Monday for a final spacewalk to install fresh batteries, thermal shields and a sensor to pinpoint celestial targets for research.

Lead spacewalker John Grunsfeld and partner Andrew Feustel left the shuttle’s air lock at about 8:30 a.m. EDT (1230 GMT), almost an hour ahead of schedule.

“OK, Drew. Let’s go and be productive,” Grunsfeld said as they headed out toward Hubble.

Their primary job is to replace three of Hubble’s batteries and one of its star-tracking sensors, which are used to aim the observatory at celestial targets.

The astronauts also hope to make up some work left over from Sunday’s spacewalk by crew mates Michael Massimino and Michael Good, who battled stuck bolts and equipment glitches in their attempt to revive one of Hubble’s dead science instruments.

The Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph, known as STIS, was used to hunt for black holes and probe the gas and dust between galaxies before a power failure shut it down in 2004.

Tests of the instrument showed the repair was successful, NASA spokesman Rob Navias said.

Grunsfeld and Feustel plan to replace the rest of Hubble’s batteries. Three of the six batteries were replaced on Thursday during the mission’s first spacewalk.

Swapping the remaining three will complete NASA’s primary goals for the mission, the fifth and final servicing call to Hubble before the shuttle fleet is due to be retired next year.

FRIDAY RETURN PLANNED

The Atlantis crew plans to release Hubble back into orbit on Tuesday and return to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Friday.

During four previous spacewalks, astronauts installed a new camera and light-splitting spectrograph, replaced Hubble’s positioning system, repaired two instruments and attached a docking ring so a robotic spacecraft can be sent to remove Hubble from orbit at the end of its operational lifetime.

The upgrades are expected to keep Hubble on the cutting edge of scientific exploration for at least five years so it can work in tandem with its replacement, the James Webb Space Telescope.

Grunsfeld and Feustel also hope to have enough time to install metal shields over the telescope’s instrument bays to help protect the observatory from the harsh environment of space. One of the shields was scheduled to be attached on Sunday, but the astronauts ran out of time.

NASA designed covers for three areas of the telescope and hopes to get to at least two of them on Monday.

Spacewalkers tackle final Hubble fix-up tasks

Astronauts finished the last of five complex spacewalks to refurbish the Hubble Space Telescope on Monday, leaving the 19-year-old instrument at the height of its star-gazing prowess.

Three earlier spacewalks during the shuttle Atlantis’ 11-day servicing mission to the bus-sized telescope were beset by frozen bolts and balky equipment that left astronauts cursing and ground controllers scrambling to improvise solutions.

But John Grunsfeld and Andrew Feustel’s seven-hour house call to Hubble on Monday went so smoothly that NASA added a final task: replacing some of the telescope’s thermal insulation.

It was the last time that human hands will ever likely touch Hubble, due to NASA’s plans to retire the shuttle fleet next year.

NASA hopes the improvements will keep Hubble operational until at least 2014 so it can work in tandem with its replacement, the James Webb Space Telescope.

“Hey John, you guys have had a great set of spacewalks. Come on in,” shuttle Commander Scott Altman told Grunsfeld after he and Feustel replaced batteries and a sensor on Hubble.

“I’m on my way,” Grunsfeld said.

Before returning to Atlantis’ airlock, Grunsfeld gave a farewell to Hubble that resembled an address to an old friend.

“I want to wish Hubble its’ own set of adventures and with the new instruments we’ve installed that it may unlock further mysteries of the universe,” Grunsfeld said.

The telescope is now “more powerful then ever” and has the ability to divine the mass of black holes and sample the composition of distant planets, said Jennifer Wiseman, chief of exoplanet and stellar astrophysics at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

“It’s almost like starting with a brand-new observatory,” Wiseman said.

The scientific gains came at a high cost in sweat and toil for Atlantis’ astronauts, who logged two of the longest spacewalks in NASA history on the Hubble mission.

On two spacewalks, astronauts removed dozens of tiny screws and clamored inside the telescope’s body to remove razor-sharp computer circuit boards that were never designed to be repaired in space, a task that NASA officials likened to brain surgery.

The Atlantis crew plans to release Hubble back into orbit on Tuesday and return to the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Friday.

Hubble has helped rewrite astronomy text books. Among its key contributions are the discovery that the universe is expanding at an increasingly fast rate and that galaxies formed relatively soon after the Big Bang explosion that created the universe 13.7 billion years ago.

(Additional reporting by Irene Klotz)

Astronauts release Hubble telescope back into space

Astronauts release Hubble telescope back into spaceRejuvenated by hours of repairs in space, the Hubble Space Telescope floated out of shuttle Atlantis’ cargo bay on Tuesday to reclaim its place as the world’s flagship observatory for astronomical research.

Atlantis astronauts spent more than 36 hours over five marathon spacewalks to make upgrades and outfit Hubble with new instruments. These included a panchromatic wide-field camera that should be able to see objects formed just 500 million years after the universe’s birth in the big bang explosion some 13.7 billion years ago.

Using the shuttle’s robot arm, astronaut Megan McArthur gently lifted the 13-tonne observatory from a work platform in Atlantis’ payload bay where it had been positioned since Wednesday.

Holding the telescope high overhead, she released Hubble at 8:57 a.m. EDT (1257 GMT) as the spacecraft soared 350 miles (560 km) over the planet.

“There are folks who thought we couldn’t do this. They told us, ‘You’re too aggressive,’” said lead flight director Tony Ceccacci. “I don’t want to say, ‘We told you so,’ but, ‘We told you so.’”

Atlantis is due to land at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida on Friday.

Watching Hubble resume its solitary voyage in orbit was a bittersweet moment for the U.S. space agency, which has staged four previous shuttle missions to service the observatory, plus a 1990 flight to put it into orbit. The shuttle fleet is being retired next year.

The Atlantis crew completed everything NASA had planned, including the unprecedented repair of two science instruments not designed to be worked on in space. The astronauts, clad in bulky suits and gloves, sometimes struggled with the repair work, and were held up at times by stuck bolts.

‘SHOWTIME’

“It’s showtime for us now,” said Hubble program scientist Eric Smith. “We got everything we asked for.”

NASA plans to release the first images from the refurbished Hubble in September, following extensive tests of its cameras, light-splitting spectrographs and other systems.

“I truly believe this is a very important moment in human history, and I think it’s an important moment for science,” Hubble project scientist David Leckrone said.

“Just using what Hubble’s already done as a starting point, it’s unimaginable that we won’t dramatically go further than that,” he added.

Hubble already has changed astronomers’ understanding of how the universe formed and is evolving. It found ancient galaxies that formed well before scientists believed it was possible for them to exist.

It also provided evidence of an anti-gravity force known as “dark energy” that is inflating all of space at a faster and faster rate.

“There’s almost no area of astronomy that isn’t in some way significantly impacted by Hubble,” Leckrone said.

Added Smith, “I’m really looking forward to what comes next.”

Space shuttle readies for landing, watching weather

Space shuttle readies for landing, watching weatherSpace shuttle Atlantis prepared on Thursday to leave orbit after a successful mission that repaired the Hubble Space Telescope, but poor weather over Florida may delay Friday’s planned homecoming.

Shuttle Commander Scott Altman and his flight crew tested Atlantis’ rocket thrusters and other equipment needed to return through the atmosphere and land.

Touchdown is scheduled for 10 a.m. EDT (1400 GMT) on Friday at the Kennedy Space Center, with a back-up opportunity at 11:39 a.m. (1539 GMT)

The weather, however, may pose a problem. Powerful thunderstorms and heavy rain pummeled central Florida late on Wednesday, leaving cloudy skies and drizzle on Thursday that is expected to linger for several days.

Nevertheless, NASA told the astronauts to be ready to leave orbit in case the weather breaks.

“You know how the weather changes rapidly in Florida,” astronaut Greg Johnson told the crew from Mission Control in Houston. “We’ll plan as it comes.”

The shuttle has enough supplies to remain in orbit until Monday.

NASA said the shuttle is in good condition for landing following several inflight inspections of its heat shield by the crew. Heat shield damage is blamed for the 2003 Columbia disaster.

Atlantis is returning from NASA’s fifth and final servicing call to the 19-year-old Hubble telescope, which has been instrumental in expanding scientists’ understanding of the universe and widening public knowledge of astronomy.

GRUELING SPACEWALKS

Hubble’s unprecedented photographs of celestial objects include pictures of planetary nebula, which are colorful gas shells of exploded stars, and of a dizzying array of galaxies.

NASA is retiring the shuttle fleet next year and no other planned or existing spaceships have the capability of satellite servicing.

Working in teams of two, the Atlantis astronauts completed five occasionally grueling spacewalks to install new cameras, repair broken instruments and replace Hubble’s batteries and positioning gyroscopes.

The telescope also received fresh layers of thermal insulation and a docking ring so that a future spacecraft can hook up and steer the 13-ton observatory out of orbit toward its eventual final resting place in the ocean.

Without the servicing mission, Hubble’s effective operating days had looked short, with two of its main science instruments shut down by power failures and no gyroscopes to spare.

The spinning devices are needed to lock the telescope’s gaze on targets with the accuracy of a laser illuminating a coin several hundred miles (km) away.

The Atlantis crew’s refurbishments should keep the observatory on the cutting edge of scientific research until at least 2014 when its replacement, the infrared-sensitive James Webb Space Telescope, is scheduled to be in orbit.

“We all feel pretty good about what’s been accomplished,” Atlantis flight engineer Megan McArthur said during the crew’s inflight news conference on Wednesday. “But we’re also looking forward to taking a little bit of a break.”

Astronauts begin 3rd spacewalk for Hubble upgrades

Astronauts begin 3rd spacewalk for Hubble upgrades Washington – Astronauts John Grunsfeld and Andrew Feustel began Saturday the current shuttle mission’s third spacewalk to upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope, the US space agency NASA said.

The agency’s website said that the third of the scheduled five spacewalks on the STS-125 mission began at 9:35 am EDT (1335 GMT).

Grunsfeld and Feustel will install a new instrument known as the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, a device designed to break up light into its components.

It will allow astronomers to study the large-scale structure and origins of the universe, including how galaxies, stars and planets form and how elements developed.

In two spacewalks so far, astronauts have installed a new camera on the ageing telescope, and replaced a computer and the gyroscopes that keep it aligned.

Scientists say the upgrades, which US space agency NASA hopes will extend Hubble’s life span until at least 2014, will continue to provide clues about the origin and nature of the universe.

Since its launch in 1990, Hubble has helped scientists to place the age of the universe at 13.7 billion years, learn that black holes are at the centre of most galaxies, monitor planetary formation and discover that the universe is expanding at an ever-faster pace. (dpa)

Astronauts fix Hubble gyroscopes, despite technical glitch

Washington, May 16 (ANI): Astronauts have managed to repair gyroscopes in the Hubble, the most critical repair to the giant space telescope, despite facing significant glitches in the process.

According to a report by BBC News, in a second spacewalk, mission specialists Mike Good and Mike Massimino put a refurbished pair of gyroscopes into the telescope after a new set refused to go in.

Besides the gyroscopes, which would enable the Hubble to orient precisely, the giant telescope also got fresh batteries to ensure five more years of life.

Despite the setbacks, scientists said that Hubble would function well, pointing to ever-distant objects in the cosmos.

The troubled spacewalk on May 15 was the longest yet, lasting eight hours.

“At times, I felt like I was wrestling a bear,” Mike Massimino was quoted as saying by AFP news agency, as he and Mike Good struggled to install the gyroscopes, or “rate sensing units” (RSUs).

Previously, only three of the six gyroscopes worked.

But, after the marathon spacewalk, Hubble has four brand new sets and two refurbished ones. Only two are needed to orient the telescope properly.

Of the six gyroscopes replaced, three had failed, two were acting up and one was working properly.

Gyroscopes keep the 19-year-old Hubble telescope pointed where it should be, and hence the replacement operation was the most important part of this mission’s five scheduled spacewalks.

The first part of the spacewalk was to replace the three RSUs, each of which contains two gyroscopes.

While the first RSU went in as planned, the second one did not seat properly on its plate. The crew opted to place the third RSU in the slot of the second.

The same problem occurred when the RSU meant for the second slot was placed into the third, so the crew opted to install a refurbished unit instead.

But, Hubble’s deputy senior project scientist, Mal Niedner, said he was not concerned that the astronauts had to resort to refurbished gyroscopes, which lack the latest anticorrosive wiring.

“It’s the difference between an A and an A-plus,” he was quoted as saying by AP news agency.

The three batteries that were replaced were the original equipment installed on Hubble 19 years ago, intended to have just a five-year lifespan. (ANI)

NASA examines long stretch of nicks on space shuttle Atlantis

Washington, May 13 (ANI): Astronauts aboard NASA’s space shuttle Atlantis have uncovered a long stretch of nicks on their space shuttle, which are the result of launch debris.

They were inspecting their ship for signs of launch damage when they came across the nicks.

Mission Control informed the crew that it’s a 21-inch stretch of nicks over four to five thermal tiles on the right side of Atlantis. The damage is where the right wing joins the fuselage.

Mission Control says it could be related to debris that came off the fuel tank almost two minutes after liftoff.

NASA said that the damage does not appear to be serious, but more analysis is needed.

Atlantis blasted off on May 11 on a risky repair mission to the Hubble Space Telescope. Endeavour is on standby in case a rescue is needed.

This final trip to Hubble is especially dangerous because of all the space junk in the telescope’s 350-mile-high orbit.

Atlantis seems to have come through its launch fairly well, at least. But the analysis is continuing.

On this fifth and final repair mission, Atlantis’ crew will replace Hubble’s batteries and gyroscopes, install two new cameras and take a crack at fixing two broken science instruments, something never before attempted.

They also will remove the command and data-handling unit that failed in September and had to be revived, and put in a spare that was hustled into operation.

Fresh insulating covers will be added to the outside of the telescope, and a new fine guidance sensor for pointing will be hooked up.

Five spacewalks will be needed to accomplish everything. (ANI)

NASA’s shuttle Atlantis launches on final Hubble servicing mission

Washington, May 12 (ANI): NASA’s space shuttle Atlantis, with its seven-member crew, has launched on the final Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission.

Atlantis’ 11-day mission will include five spacewalks to refurbish Hubble with state-of-the-art science instruments designed to improve the telescope’s discovery capabilities by up to 70 times while extending its lifetime through at least 2014.

Shortly before liftoff, Commander Scott Altman thanked the teams that helped make the launch possible.

“At last our launch has come along,” said Altman. “Getting to this point has been challenging, but the whole team, everyone, has pulled together to take us into space,” he added.

Altman is joined on STS-125 by Pilot Gregory C. Johnson and Mission Specialists Megan McArthur, John Grunsfeld, Mike Massimino, Andrew Feustel and Michael Good.

McArthur will serve as the flight engineer and lead for robotic arm operations while the remaining mission specialists pair up for the hands-on spacewalk work after Hubble is captured and secured in the payload bay.

Altman, Grunsfeld and Massimino are space shuttle and Hubble mission veterans. Johnson, Feustel and Good are first-time space fliers.

The STS-125 mission is the 126th shuttle flight, the 30th for Atlantis and the second of five planned in 2009.

Hubble was delivered to space on April 24, 1990, on the STS-31 mission.

STS-125 is referred to as Servicing Mission 4, although it is technically the fifth servicing flight to the telescope.

“Hubble has a long history of providing outstanding science and beautiful pictures,” said Ed Weiler, associate administrator for NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.

“If the servicing mission is successful, it will give us a telescope that will continue to astound both scientists and the public for many years to come,” he added. (ANI)

Image of planetary nebula is Hubble camera’s final “pretty picture”

Washington, May 11 (ANI): The Hubble Space Telescope has captured the image of a planetary nebula as the final “pretty picture” of the Wide Field Planetary Camera 2 (WFPC2), which is soon going to be decommissioned.

This planetary nebula is known as Kohoutek 4-55 (or K 4-55). It is one of a series of planetary nebulae that were named after their discoverer, Czech astronomer Lubos Kohoutek.

A planetary nebula contains the outer layers of a red giant star that were expelled into interstellar space when the star was in the late stages of its life.

Ultraviolet radiation emitted from the remaining hot core of the star ionizes the ejected gas shells, causing them to glow.

In the specific case of K 4-55, a bright inner ring is surrounded by a bipolar structure. The entire system is then surrounded by a faint red halo, seen in the emission by nitrogen gas.

This multi-shell structure is fairly uncommon in planetary nebulae.

The colors represent the makeup of the various emission clouds in the nebula: red represents nitrogen, green represents hydrogen, and blue represents oxygen.

K 4-55 is nearly 4,600 light-years away in the constellation Cygnus.

The WFPC2 instrument, which was installed in 1993 to replace the original Wide Field/Planetary Camera, will be removed to make room for Wide Field Camera 3 during the upcoming Hubble Servicing Mission.

During the camera’s amazing, nearly 16-year run, WFPC2 provided outstanding science and spectacular images of the cosmos.

Some of its best-remembered images are of the Eagle Nebula pillars, Comet P/Shoemaker-Levy 9′s impacts on Jupiter’s atmosphere, and the 1995 Hubble Deep Field – the longest and deepest Hubble optical image of its time. (ANI)

NASA mission to upgrade Hubble to launch on May 11

Washington, May 1 (ANI): NASA has selected the launch date for the STS-125 mission of space shuttle Atlantis as May 11, which will upgrade the Hubble Space Telescope.

The date was announced after NASA managers did a complete review of its readiness for flight.

Commander Scott Altman and his six crewmates are scheduled to lift off at 2:01 p.m. EDT, May 11, from NASA’s Kennedy Space Center in Florida, US.

During the review, top NASA and contractor managers assessed the risks associated with the mission and determined the shuttle’s equipment, support systems and procedures are ready for flight.

Atlantis’ 11-day mission will include five spacewalks to refurbish Hubble with state-of-the-art science instruments.

After the astronauts’ visit, the telescope’s capabilities will be expanded and its lifetime extended through at least 2014.

Commander Altman will be joined on the mission by Pilot Gregory C. Johnson and Mission Specialists Andrew Feustel, Michael Good, John Grunsfeld, Megan McArthur and Mike Massimino.

The spacewalkers are Feustel, Good, Grunsfeld and Massimino. McArthur is the flight engineer and lead for robotic arm operations. (ANI)

NASA’s online game lets you peer through the James Webb Space Telescope

Washington, April 29 (ANI): NASA has developed a flash on-line game about telescopes, featuring its next-generation spacecraft, the James Webb Space Telescope.

The game, called “Scope it Out!” includes an introduction to telescopes and four matching games where you can compare simple telescopes to both Webb and the Hubble Space Telescope.

It was created at NASA Goddard by Maggie Masetti, with Dr. Anita Krishnamurthi providing oversight on the project.

Programmer Kent deVillafranca and artist Susan Lin, both of Science Systems and Applications, Greenbelt, Maryland, did the programming and graphics for this project.

“This is a great way to teach children and adults on how simple and complex space telescopes work,” said Krishnamurthi, the Education and Public Outreach Lead for Webb at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.

The level of the game is for middle school students and above.

There are five levels of gaming in the “Scope it Out!” game from Level Zero to Level Four.

Most levels present an image of a young woman looking through a telescope, side-by-side with a space telescope.

Level Zero gives a basic lesson in telescope optics through animated graphics.

Level One is where the matching game starts, by asking the player to find the seven components in the simple telescope that match with those in the Webb telescope.

The game culminates in Level Four where players have to find the components of the Hubble Telescope that match up with the James Webb Space Telescope.

This game requires FLASH 8 or higher, and there are two versions.

One version is for large monitors (1024×768) the other is for smaller (800×600) monitors. Once a monitor size is chosen, the game will pop up in a separate window.

For convenience, there’s also a small toggle button in the lower left corner of the game to allow a player to change the quality of the graphics.

The James Webb Space Telescope is a large, infrared space telescope, scheduled for launch in 2013.

JWST will find the first galaxies that formed in the early Universe, connecting the Big Bang to our own Milky Way Galaxy.

It will peer through dusty clouds to see stars forming planetary systems, connecting the Milky Way to our own Solar System. (ANI)

Hubble spots swirling dust lanes in oddball galaxy

Berlin, April 8 (ANI): The NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope has captured the image of an oddball galaxy that is highlighted with striking swirling dust lanes and glittering globular clusters.

Dubbed NGC 7049, the galaxy is found in the constellation of Indus, and is the brightest of a cluster of galaxies, a so-called Brightest Cluster Galaxy (BCG).

Typical BCGs are some of the oldest and most massive galaxies. They provide excellent opportunities for astronomers to study the elusive globular clusters lurking within.

The globular clusters in NGC 7049 are seen as the sprinkling of small faint points of light in the galaxy’s halo.

The halo – the ghostly region of diffuse light surrounding the galaxy – is composed of myriads of individual stars and provides a luminous background to the remarkable swirling ring of dust lanes surrounding NGC 7049′s core.

Globular clusters are very dense and compact groupings of a few hundreds of thousands of stars bound together by gravity.

They contain some of the first stars to be produced in a galaxy.

NGC 7049 has far fewer such clusters than other similar giant galaxies in very big, rich groups. This indicates to astronomers how the surrounding environment influenced the formation of galaxy halos in the early Universe.

The image was taken by the Advanced Camera for Surveys on Hubble, which is optimized to hunt for galaxies and galaxy clusters in the remote and ancient Universe, at a time when our cosmos was very young. (ANI)

Scientists observe the largest exploding star yet seen

Washington, March 24 (ANI): Scientists at the Weizmann Institute of Science and San Diego State University have observed the largest exploding star yet seen, which is the size of 50 suns.

While exploding stars, called supernovae, have been viewed with everything from the naked eye to high-tech research satellites, no one had directly observed what happens when a really huge star blows up.

Dr. Avishay Gal-Yam of the Weizmann Institute’s Faculty of Physics and Professor Douglas Leonard of San Diego State University recently located and calculated the mass of a gigantic star on the verge of exploding, following through with observations of the blast and its aftermath.

As they continued to track the spectacular event, they found that most of the star’s mass collapsed in on itself, resulting in a large black hole.

Their findings have lent support to the reigning theory that stars ranging from tens to hundreds of times the mass of our sun all end up as black holes.

Until now, none of the supernovae stars that scientists had managed to measure had exceeded a mass of 20 suns.

Gal-Yam and Leonard were looking at a specific region in space using the Keck Telescope on Mauna Kea in Hawaii and the Hubble Space Telescope.

Identifying the about-to-explode star, they calculated its mass to be equal to 50-100 suns. Continued observation revealed that only a small part of the star’s mass was flung off in the explosion.

According to Gal-Yam, most of the material was drawn into the collapsing core as its gravitational pull mounted.

In subsequent telescope images of that section of the sky, the star seems to have disappeared. In other words, the star has now become a black hole – so dense that light can’t escape. (ANI)