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NASA Space

New NASA Telescope Will Provide X-Ray Views of the Universe (nytimes.com) 15

A brand-new space telescope will soon reveal a hidden vision of the cosmos, potentially transforming our understanding of black holes, supernovas and even the nature of the universe itself. No, not that one. From a report: Much attention is being devoted this month to the James Webb Space Telescope, from NASA and the European Space Agency, which is set to launch on Dec. 22. But a more exclusive cadre of astronomers watched excitedly on Thursday during the trip to space of a smaller, but also transformative, observatory. NASA launched the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer, or IXPE mission, on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from Kennedy Space Center in Florida at 1 a.m. Eastern. The spacecraft cost a mere $188 million, compared with the James Webb's mammoth budget of $9.7 billion, and is expected to demonstrate a new form of astronomy. It will, for the first time, perform imaging X-ray polarimetry in orbit, a technique that could offer astronomers insights that no other telescope can match.

"It's giving us information about some of the most bizarre and exciting objects in space," said Thomas Zurbuchen, the associate administrator of NASA's science mission directorate. IXPE (pronounced by the mission team as "ix-pee") was placed into an orbit 340 miles above Earth after its launch. The telescope will spend several weeks there deploying its scientific instruments and testing its equipment, then begin its two-year mission. X-rays are a useful way to observe the universe. Emitted from extremely energetic objects, they allow astronomers to probe events -- superheated jets near black holes or explosions of stars, for example -- in a way other wavelengths, such as visible light, cannot. But X-rays can be studied only from space because they are mostly absorbed by Earth's atmosphere. A variety of dedicated X-ray space telescopes and instruments have launched to orbit, most notably NASA's Chandra X-ray and ESA's XMM-Newton observatories, which both launched in 1999. With spacecraft like these, scientists have unveiled the birthplaces of stars inside gaseous nebulas and mapped the spread of dark matter in clusters of galaxies, among other pioneering work.

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New NASA Telescope Will Provide X-Ray Views of the Universe

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  • What are the current Vegas odds on the JWT actually launching successfully, making it to the Lagrange point, deploying and working as designed?

  • by pi_rules ( 123171 ) on Friday December 10, 2021 @02:40PM (#62067035)

    After launching from the Cape the upper stage and payload were at something like a 28.5 degree inclination. To tilt that back down to being just over the equator required 3.5 to 3.7km/s of deltaV, or change in speed.

    That's enough of a burn to go from Earth to the Moon. You can certainly impact it with that much, might be able to slip into orbit even.

    It never seems like it would take that much energy to tilt an orbit, but oh boy, it does.

    • by ceoyoyo ( 59147 )

      The observatory was originally planned to launch on a Pegasus, which could launch right on the equator. But Falcon 9 was cheaper, even with the inclination change. And they had more room in the fairing to reduce the number of bits that needed to deploy in orbit.

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