Category Archives: james webb space telescope

Hubble’s 24th Anniversary

Bringing Us the Cosmos, One Observation at a Time

Hubble Space Telescope
Hubble Space Telescope

On Thursday, April 24th, it will be 24 years since Hubble Space Telescope was sent skyward aboard space shuttle Discovery. It was a heady day for folks who had spent much of their careers designing and building the observatory. The subsequent discovery of spherical aberration in the mirror seemed like the end of the world at the time, but that got fixed relatively quickly and Hubble has gone on to do remarkable things.

I was about to enter graduate school when Hubble was launched. At the university, I had a job coordinating comet observations for the Ulysses Comet Watch, and my boss was one of the instrument leads for Hubble. Eventually I joined the instrument team as a very junior member, and watched as the telescope went through its difficult first years. Somewhere in that first year, I noticed that Hubble was doing science, despite its problems. That inspired me to start taking notes about those observations, and a couple of years later, I published (along with my boss, Jack Brandt, who was second author) a book called Hubble Vision (that went to two editions). I also wrote a planetarium show, which we turned into a broadcast video that went on to win a major award for science outreach in 1992.

For me, Hubble Space Telescope has been a huge part of my life, even though I wasn’t a major science user. I was part of the team, and it afforded me a seat at the table to see how Big Science was done with a Big Telescope.

Today, Hubble is iconic. Five servicing missions have made it a useful and productive observatory. It regularly cranks out gorgeous images, high-resolution data sets, and much more. A few years ago the Space Telescope Science Institute celebrated the observatory’s millionth observation.

The sum total of those observations has been a new look at the universe. They have opened up areas of study that people didn’t expect. That serendipity isn’t something you can predict, but with any new technological advancement, you can certainly expect it.

What blows me away is that a whole generation of astronomers now entering the field have grown up knowing about Hubble, expecting to use it (or its successor, the James Webb Space Telescope, or its sister observatories Chandra X-Ray Observatory, Spitzer Space Telescope, and others) and knowing that they’ll make great discoveries with it.

With Hubble, astronomers have peered into starbirth creches to spot baby stars, just starting to shine. They’ve watched as old stars die, found distant galaxies existing at a time not long after the Big Bang, and detected evidence for the mysterious dark matter that seems to permeate the universe. Oh yes, the telescope has found black holes. Lots of them. There was a time when the Institute would announce a black hole discovery, and some of us would laugh and say, “Yet another Damn Black Hole.”

That’s actually kind of staggering, that something so theoretical when I first went to college because something commonplace, due to many of the Hubble observations. So many of the discoveries made by astronomers using it have been that kind of staggering. And, the telescope’s existence has pushed astronomers to create even more sensitive instruments here on the ground, through the use of adaptive optics. So, Hubble has pushed the envelope in many ways.

Want to learn  more about this observatory? Take some time to visit its Web site this week and celebrate a little by gazing at the wonderful images. They’re a small part of the huge work this telescope has done to allow astronomers to peer deeper at fainter objects to help tell the story of the cosmos.

What’s Infrared and Why Do We Care?

The James Webb Space Telescope Will Tell Us

What a person looks like in infrared wavelengths of light. Courtesy IPAC/CoolCosmos.

Infrared astronomy is not new — it’s been around for decades, but it continues to shake up our view of the cosmos. In particular, it lets us peek into warm places in the universe that we couldn’t see into with other types of telescopes and detectors tuned to visible light or other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum.

Infrared radiation is given off by warm things. YOU glow in the infrared, although you probably never gave it much thought.

Out in the larger universe, infrared radiation from hot young stars, for example, can slip through the clouds of gas and dust that surround them. This makes these once-hidden objects detectable to us — “visible”, in a sense and in a way they weren’t when we looked at those same clouds of gas and dust with optical telescopes.

The best way to study the universe in infrared wavelengths is to send spacecraft out beyond our infrared-interfering atmosphere. So, in recent decades such telescopes as the Spitzer Space Telescope, the Herschel Observatory and new instruments on the Hubble Space Telescope have extended our view of the planets, stars and galaxies into new realms of discovery.

There’s a new kid on the infrared detection block called the James Webb Space Telescope that is being readied for launch in a few years. It will be a high-resolution eye on the infrared universe and answer a lot of questions about processes of star formation, the activities of hidden black holes at the hearts of galaxies, and the search for worlds around other stars.

Want to learn more about it?  NASA has a great little video out that answers a lot of questions about JWST and the infrared universe. You can see the video and read more about the project at the JWST web site.

CROWD-SOURCE SCIENCE FUNDING:  WE CAN DO IT!

Speaking of cutting-edge research, my friends over at the Uwingu project are nearing the end of their crowd-sourcing campaign. They have only a few hours left today (Friday, September 14th, 2012) before campaign ends.

These guys are absolutely serious about funding good science research that isn’t getting funded and should be. Here’s where you come in.  You can join the push for funding for as little as $10 (or even less) and you get some cool perks along with your contribution.

What’s not to like?

You part with the equivalent cost of a Venti latté and a brownie, or a personal pan pizza and a drink, or a beer and some wings, or maybe some music downloads, and in the not-too-distant future, a researcher gets a chance to answer a burning scientific question — with YOUR help. So, head on over to their Web site and make a difference.  I did!   And, after you join up, they’ll send you some perks and keep you posted on an exciting new product they’ll be selling to help fund science into the indefinite future. Check it out!