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![]() INFRARED SPACE TELESCOPE RETURNS FIRST IMAGES, GETS NEW NAME From Lori Stiles, UA News Services, 520-621-1877, December 18, 2003 ------------------------------------------------------------------- Contact Information George Rieke 520-245-8339 (cell phone) Erick Young 520-661-5820 (cell phone) John Stansberry 520-626-6658 Karl Gordon 520-621-5688 Related Web sites Spitzer Space Telescope - http://www.spitzer.caltech.edu/ MIPS - http://mips.as.arizona.edu/mipspage/ M81 observations - http://dirty.as.arizona.edu/~kgordon...o/m81_ero.html ------------------------------------------------------------------------- University of Arizona astronomers are delighted with first images from the Spitzer Space Telescope, formerly called the Space Infrared Telescope Facility. UA astronomy Professor George Rieke presented some of the images at a news conference at NASA Headquarters in Washington, D.C. today. Rieke is principal investigator for the Multiband Imaging Photometer (MIPS), one of three science instruments aboard the Spitzer Space Telescope. "We know now that this telescope will do exciting things," Rieke said. "All of these observations were to help us figure out if everything is working well enough to do the observations we plan to do. It is. We already could write two dozen papers from little scraps of information we got during checkout. This is so new that there's something new in almost everything we see." UA-built MIPS detectors took the first-ever image of dust in the inner part of the massive disc of dusty debris left over from planet formation around Fomalhaut, a star 25 light years away. Fomalhaut is the 18th brightest star in the sky and 100 times more luminous than our sun. Its outer ring of icy debris is two or three times the size of our solar system. Although other telescopes have observed the outer edges of the Fomalhaut's disc, none have been able to photograph the inner region. "What we think is happening is that there probably is one massive planet, or more, orbiting this star within a ring of icy, Kuiper Belt-like objects," Rieke said. Kuiper Belt objects are small, icy bodies left over from solar system formation. They form a vast shell around the outer edge of the solar system. "The planet, or planets, may be deflecting comets to the inner part of the solar system." Colliding debris create a dense ball of dust. MIPS images taken in early November show the dust that heats up as it spirals toward Fomalhaut. Fomalhaut's inner solar system dust ball would fill our solar system out to the planet Uranus. Another new image shows the dusty, star-studded arms of galaxy M81, a large spiral galaxy 12 million light years away. "This is the first time we've seen such a well-resolved image of a classic grand design spiral galaxy at far-infrared wavelengths," said MIPS instrument team scientist Karl Gordon of UA's Steward Observatory. "There is an incredible amount of structure that we just haven't been able to see before. For the first time, we will be able to study different star-forming regions within many different galaxies at infrared wavelengths. The quality of the data so soon after launch is just amazing." UA MIPS team member John Stansberry and NASA Ames scientist Dale Cruikshank took an image of heat given off by dust around Comet P-29 (Schwassmann/Wachmann 1), the 29th comet discovered in our solar system. Most comets become active only when they come in as close to the sun as Earth. That's where water frozen in comets starts to "sublimate," or turn from ice to gas. Comet P-29 is beyond Jupiter, and is too cold for water ice to sublimate. What drives this comet's activity is probably carbon dioxide ice, dry ice. Carbon dioxide gas carries dust away from the comet, forming a cloud, or coma, many times larger than Jupiter. "We got a really good image of this comet. Instrument performance is right on," Stansberry said. Ball Aerospace, Boulder, Co., built the MIPS instrument. The Spitzer Space Telescope was launched from Cape Canaveral, Fla. on August 24 and is the fourth of NASA's Great Observatories. The telescope is more sensitive to infrared radiation, or heat, than any ever built. It complements the Hubble Space Telescope, the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, and the Chandra X-Ray Observatory that operate, respectively, at visible, gamma ray and X-ray wavelengths. UA's Steward Observatory plays a major role in the Spitzer Space Telescope. Not only did UA scientists provide one of the telescope's three science instruments, Steward Observatory astronomers lead two of its six major Legacy Science projects. UA astronomer Robert Kennicutt Jr. leads the "SINGS" project. He and his team will use the Spitzer telescope to study star formation in nearby galaxies. Astronomers want to know why some nearby galaxies create hundreds more stars than the Milky Way creates, while other galaxies hardly form any stars. UA astronomer Michael Meyer leads another Legacy Science project. He and his team are studying dust disks evolving around Milky Way stars to learn if solar systems like ours are rare or commonplace. NASA announced the telescope's new name at today's news conference. It honors Lyman Spitzer, Jr., one of the 20th century's most distinguished astronomers. Spitzer was the first to propose placing large telescopes in space. His efforts led to two successful missions, including the Hubble Space Telescope. The Spitzer Space Telescope is managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, a division of the California Institute of Technology. Science operations are handled at Caltech. |
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![]() Ron Baalke wrote: INFRARED SPACE TELESCOPE RETURNS FIRST IMAGES, GETS NEW NAME From Lori Stiles, UA News Services, 520-621-1877, December 18, 2003 That three frequency shot of M81 turned into a color view is a real knockout! Pat |
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