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Controlling Robots with the Mind. Astronomical hunt ends in success.Augmented Reality: A New Way of Seeing. Atomic memory developed. Examination Topics for Advanced Students.
Donald Savage
Headquarters, Washington April 30, 2002
(Phone:
202/358-1547
Nancy Neal
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.
(Phone:
301/286-0039)
Ray Villard
Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore
(Phone:
410/338-4514)
RELEASE:
02-74
HUBBLE'S
NEW CAMERA DELIVERS BREATHTAKING VIEWS OF THE UNIVERSE
"Remarkable, breathtaking" are words jubilant astronomers
are using to describe the first four views of the universe taken by
the Hubble Space Telescope's new Advanced Camera for Surveys, released
by NASA today.
The
new camera was installed on Hubble by astronauts during a shuttle mission
last March, the fourth Hubble Space Telescope servicing mission. During
five of the most challenging spacewalks ever attempted, the crew successfully
upgraded the orbiting telescope with the new camera, a new power unit,
new solar arrays and an experimental cooling unit for an infrared camera.
Hubble managers say the orbiting telescope has been operating superbly
since the servicing mission.
"Today marks the beginning of a new era of exploration with Hubble," said Dr. Ed Weiler, Associate Administrator for Space Science at NASA Headquarters, Washington. "Our team of scientists and engineers on the ground and the astronauts in space once again did the impossible. After 12 years in space,
Hubble
not only was given a major overhaul, its new camera has already shown
us that, even after 12 years of great science and astounding images,
we haven't seen anything yet."
Among
the suite of four "suitable-for-framing" Advanced Camera for
Surveys (ACS) science-demonstration pictures released today is a stunning
view of a colliding galaxy, dubbed the "Tadpole," located
420 million light-years away. Unlike textbook images of stately galaxies,
the "Tadpole" -- with a long tail of stars -- captures the
essence of a dynamic, restless and violent universe, looking like a
runaway pinwheel firework.
"The
ACS is opening a wide new window onto the universe. These are among
the best images of the distant universe humans have ever seen,"
said astronomer Holland Ford of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore,
lead scientist in the camera's seven-year development.
The
camera's tenfold increase in efficiency will open up much anticipated
new capability for discovery. "ACS will allow us to push back the
frontier of the early universe. We will be able to enter the 'twilight
zone' period when galaxies were just beginning to form out of the blackness
following the cooling of the universe from the big bang," said
Ford.
The
ACS is a camera of superlatives. It is expected to surpass the sensitivity
of the largest ground-based telescope to eventually see the very faintest
objects ever recorded. The camera delivers a panoramic crispness comparable
to that of a wide-screen movie, containing 16 million picture elements
(megapixels) per image. By comparison, digital photos from typical consumer
cameras are 2 to 4 megapixels.
The
ACS image of the Tadpole illustrates the dramatic gains over the Wide
Field Planetary Camera 2 resulting from doubling the area and resolution,
and demonstrates a five-fold improvement in sensitivity. An unexpected
bonus is the enormous number of galaxies in the new Hubble image beyond
the Tadpole galaxy, giving it an appearance like the galaxy-filled Hubble
Deep Field (HDF) image, taken in 1995. However, the ACS picture was
taken in one-twelfth the time it took for the original HDF. Like the
Hubble Deep Field, the ACS galaxies contain myriad shapes that are snapshots
of galaxies throughout the universe's 13 billion-year evolution. The
ACS images are so sharp astronomers can identify "building blocks"
of galaxies, colliding galaxies and extremely distant galaxies in the
field -- an exquisite sampler of galaxies.
"The
ACS will let us obtain the deepest image of the universe for the foreseeable
future," added astronomer Garth Illingworth of the University of
California, Lick Observatory, Santa Cruz, the deputy leader for the
camera team.
The
other pictures include a stunning collision between two spiral galaxies,
dubbed "the Mice," that presage what might happen to our own
Milky Way several billion years in the future when it collides with
the neighboring galaxy in the constellation Andromeda. Computer simulations
show that we are seeing the collision of the Mice approximately 160
million years after their closest encounter. Running the simulations
forward in time shows that the two galaxies will eventually merge. A
similar fate may await the Milky Way and the Andromeda galaxy.
Looking
closer to home, ACS imaged the "Cone Nebula," a craggy-looking
mountaintop of cold gas and dust that is a cousin to Hubble's iconic
"pillars of creation" in the Eagle Nebula, photographed in
1995.
Peering
into a celestial maternity ward called the M17 Swan Nebula, the ACS
revealed a watercolor fantasy-world tapestry of vivid colors and glowing
ridges of gas. Embedded in this crucible of star creation are embryonic
planetary systems.
In
addition to the ACS, spacewalking astronauts installed a new high-tech
mechanical "refrigerator" on Hubble during the servicing mission.
This "cryocooler" has successfully pumped most of the heat
out of the interior of the Near Infrared Camera and Multi-Object Spectrometer
(NICMOS), achieving and maintaining to within a few hundredths of one
degree the target temperature for neon gas passing through the instrument
of 70 degrees Kelvin (minus 203 degrees Centigrade or minus 333 degrees
Fahrenheit).
Engineers
are now in the process of checking out the operation of the resuscitated
NICMOS instrument. By early June, scientists expect to release the first
astronomical images taken with the NICMOS since 1998, when it was still
being cooled by a rapidly depleting block of solid nitrogen ice.
The new rigid solar arrays, working with the new Power Control Unit, are generating 27 percent more electrical power than the previous arrays. This doubles the electrical power that can be allocated to the scientific instruments on Hubble. The new reaction wheel is operating normally. Nearly
a
month ago, the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph and the Wide Field
and Planetary Camera 2 resumed science observations.
"This
servicing mission has turned out to be an extraordinary success,"
said Preston Burch, Hubble Project Manager at NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center in Greenbelt, Md. "It was the most difficult and complicated
Hubble servicing mission attempted to date and our observatory came
through it with flying colors."
-end-
Electronic image files, animation and additional information are available on the Internet at:
http://oposite.stsci.edu/
http://oposite.stsci.edu/
http://oposite.stsci.edu/
and
http://hubblesite.org/go/
NASA press releases and other information are available automatically by sending an Internet electronic mail message to domo@hq.nasa.gov. In the body of the message (not the subject line) users should type the words "subscribe press-release" (no quotes). The system will reply with a confirmation via E-mail of each subscription. A second automatic message will include additional information on the service. NASA releases also are available via CompuServe using the command GO NASA. To unsubscribe from this mailing list, address an E-mail message to domo@hq.nasa.gov, leave the subject blank, and type only "unsubscribe press-release" (no quotes) in the body of the message.
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