Category Archives: JWST

More Astronomy than You Can Shake a Stick At

A Sip from the Fire Hose of Astro Information

Every year in early January is “astronomy assimilation” time for me, a time when I can go and soak up all the latest in professional astronomy research. Yes, it’s the annual winter meeting of the American Astronomical Society.  Today’s the first full day of the conference and we hit the ground running.  I’ll be posting sporadic notes from the meeting over the next few days, including some highlighted astronomy discoveries that could make the news in between the coverage of the bad snowstorms and the very sad events in Tucson.

Part of Dr. Porco's talk focused on the dynamic causes of events called "propellers" in the Saturning rings. An unusually large propeller feature is detected just beyond the Encke Gap in this Cassini image of Saturn's outer A ring taken a couple days after the planet's August 2009 equinox.

Today’s meeting began with a short presentation about the future of space observational astronomy particularly as it will be seen through the James Webb Space Telescope. Following that was a wonderful talk sponsored by the Kavli Institute about Saturn’s rings and the observations made by the Cassini spacecraft that are enabling speaker Carolyn Porco and her team members to understand the dynamics of this evolving system.

The first press conference of the meeting featured the discovery of a new rocky world called Kepler-10b. It’s circling a star that lies about 600 light-years away and has been studied steadily by the Kepler planet-finding mission for more than eight months.  This is the first rocky world discovered by Kepler and it’s a fascinating one: it is about 1.4 times the size of Earth and orbits closer to its star than Mercury does to the Sun.

Kepler-10b is a scorched world, orbiting at a distance that’s more than 20 times closer to its star than Mercury is to our own Sun. The daytime temperature’s expected to be more than 2,500 degrees Fahrenheit, hotter than lava flows here on Earth. Intense radiation from the star has kept the planet from holding onto an atmosphere. Flecks of silicates and iron may be boiled off a molten surface and swept away by the stellar radiation, much like a comet’s tail when its orbit brings it close to the Sun.

There are several constants about these meetings — especially in these exciting days of spacecraft missions like Cassini, HST, and Kepler — and that is that we’ll always be hearing about new planets around other stars, we’ll keep learning new things about familiar objects like Saturn and its rings, and Hubble Space Telescope (and its sister orbiting observatories) will keep bringing us gorgeous images of the cosmos.
Each day of this meeting is chock full of papers and results to hear about. My own path through the meeting (at least today) is guided by radio astronomy results, and so I spent some time listening to presentations about early science from the Murchison Widefield Array in Australia and the search for the epoch of reionization at low frequencies.  It’s always amazing to me the new and inventive ways that astronomers can explore the universe and find out things we didn’t know before. The more of these meetings attend, the more I realize that even though we know a LOT – there’s so much more that we will be learning in the days and years and centuries ahead.

Training for Space

What’s it Like?

A bunch of years ago I was gifted (by Mr. SpaceWriter) with an all-expenses-paid trip to Space Camp for adults held in Huntsville, Alabama. The object was a week’s worth of training in shuttle operations, and it was one of the coolest things I had done in my life to that point.  It wasn’t all kids’ play — we actually spent our days in classes learning about propulsion systems, life support systems, launch systems, etc.  Some of our lecturers were actual NASA engineers, one of whom had come to NASA from Germany in the 50s.  We spent hours in simulators and, no surprise to any of my readers, I suppose, I ended up as shuttle commander for my flight.  I had a pilot, two mission specialists and two payload specialists.  We trained together each day, and then at the end of the week, we “flew” a simulated 2-hour mission.  We had been warned in advance that there would be some anomalies thrown at us, so we had to be prepared.

Our launch was great, we cast off our SRBs on the nominal, and the main tank went just fine. Shortly thereafter, we had a fuel cell failure, which my pilot and I diagnosed in about 30 seconds and managed to fix.  Everything went fine until we got to orbit, and then one of our payload bay doors jammed.  We figured that one out, but lost about two minutes in our timeline doing so.  After that, things went fine until late in the mission, when we had a couple of electrical problems.  Fixed those, deployed our payload, had some time for some tomfoolery, and then we deorbited and landed.  Despite our problems, our crew won top ratings that week and we all went home with huge grins on our faces.

I hadn’t thought about that week in Huntsville much until today when I was reading a Twitter message from an engineer in Houston who works in Mission Control at the Johnson Space Flight Center in Houston, Texas.  She goes by the monicker @absolutspacegirl.  Today, apparently, she and her team are working their way through some simulations of similar problems (fuel cell issues, payload bay door issues) thrown at the team and she’s twittering about it. Very, very cool.

A full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope. (Click to embiggen.)
A full-scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope. (Click to embiggen.)

Speaking of teaching and learning, the NASA James Webb Space Telescope folks have launched an online game to teach about the telescope (and telescopes in general) and how such things work. James Webb Telescope will launch sometime after 2013 and will be an infrared-sensitive telescope.

This telescope is a successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. It will be able to peer through dusty clouds surrounding newborn stars, for example, and possibly see planetary systems forming around them. Wanna learn more? check out the Webb Telescope game site.