Hubble Makes a Milestone Science Observation
Telescopes and the many different instruments that can be attached to them are made to look at the sky and ferret out the hidden mysteries, open our eyes to dim, distant objects, and reveal a million things we didn’t know were out there. Your backyard telescope can do this — as can the mightiest scopes on — or off — our planet.
The Hubble Space Telescope made its millionth science observation on July 4th, using a special instrument called a spectroscope to study the light from a planet a thousand light-years away. The planet is called HAT-P-7b, and HST was looking for signatures of water vapor in the planet’s atmosphere.
It does this by looking at the atmosphere of the planet as it passes in front of its star. The light from the star shines through the gaseous envelope around the planet, and the spectral fingerprints of “stuff” (like water vapor) that is in that atmosphere will show up in the data taken by the spectrometer.
Hubble is quite well-equipped to search out such signatures, and its successor — the James Webb Space Telescope — will be even better able to do such observations. This is the kind of science that HST was built to do — and it’s the kind of science that really grabs my imagination. It’s really quite cool to think that a telescope orbiting our planet can peer across a thousand light-years of space and spy out the merest whiff of chemical signatures in the atmosphere of another planet. THAT is what makes this milestone so very, very cool!
You know what else I find very cool? Back when HST was in severe trouble because of its mirror problems, there were people who felt that we’d wasted our money, that the telescope was a bungle. One of them was Senator Barbara Mikulski of Maryland, now chair of the Senate Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations Subcommittee. She even went so far as to call Hubble a “techno-turkey” and I remember to this day seeing the anger on her face as she did it. I even quoted her in my book about Hubble (Hubble Vision).
Yet, to her credit, she did step up and champion the cause of repairing the telescope. So, I think it’s cool that we have at least one politician who recognizes the value of science and, as she always points out, the value of inspiring children to become stargazers, scientists, astronauts, and engineering professionals. I’m glad to see that she is celebrating the millionth observation too — we need many, many more to come.
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By the way, I want to thank the folks at TeachStreet for featuring this blog as one of the Featured Astronomy Blogs. I’ve rambled through their website and they have links to a number really fine writers.
That “one million” figure doesn’t make much sense as it only refers to shutters opening and closing. As I learned from an STScI spokesman, the actual number of different objects or sky fields Hubble has studied over its 21 years in orbit is much smaller, only about 32,760, as part of 8052 different observing programs. However, one “round” milestone is near: Less than one year from now Hubble should have accumulated 100,000 hours of exposure time. Let’s celebrate then (again).
Well, technically yes. And of course, if you counted all the star tracker observations… well, you get the idea. But, I don’t begrudge Hubble a milestone, do you?
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Greetings!
I am emailing you from NOVA WGBH. We are currently launching a new 3-part guest blog series on Inside NOVA. The first post, by John Logsdon, is live and can be seen at http://www.pbs.org/nova/insidenova.
John Logsdon is a professor emeritus at the Space Policy Institute, George Washington University, and author of “John F. Kennedy and the Race to the Moon.” In 2003, he was a member of the Columbia Accident Investigation Board.
Later today: Rush DeNooyer, producer of NOVA’s “Hubble’s Amazing Rescue”
July 8: Bill Adkins, former staff director of the House Space and Aeronautics Subcommittee in the U.S. House of Representatives. He is president of Adkins Strategies LLC, a DC-based consulting firm, and is a principal at the Center for Strategic Space Studies.
We hope that you will log on or could post this to your blog regarding the Hubble.
Thank you.