An artist’s illustration of the IXPE spacecraft in orbit, studying high-energy phenomena light-years from Earth NASA
NASA’s IXPE (Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer) team has been awarded a top prize in high-energy
astronomy.
The High Energy Astrophysics
Division of the American Astronomical Society (AAS) has awarded the 2024 Bruno
Rossi Prize to retired NASA astrophysicist Martin Weisskopf, Italian Space
Agency principal investigator Paolo Soffitta, and their team for development of
IXPE, “whose novel measurements advance our understanding of particle
acceleration and emission from astrophysical shocks, black holes and neutron
stars,” according to the AAS announcement.
“IXPE is a realization of decades
of work and belief in the importance of X-ray polarization measurements for
X-ray astronomy,” said Weisskopf of NASA’s Marshall Space Flight Center in
Huntsville, Alabama, who served as the principal investigator of IXPE during
its development, prior to retiring from the agency in 2022. “I am honored and
excited to share this prize with Paolo Soffitta and the entire IXPE team.”
NASA’s Imaging X-ray
Polarimetry Explorer mission, led by retired NASA astrophysicist Martin
Weisskopf, left, and Italian Space Agency principal investigator Paolo
Soffitta, has received the 2024 Rossi Prize in high-energy astronomy, awarded
annually by the American Astronomical Society.
“IXPE is the demonstration
of how an idea pursued for more than 30 years has been transformed into a
successful mission, thanks to the collaboration between the United States and
Italy,” Soffitta said. “It’s incredible to receive this prize along with Martin
Weisskopf and on behalf of so many people whose expertise and enthusiasm have
made this breakthrough in astrophysics possible.”
Launched on Dec. 9, 2021, and developed
by NASA, the Italian Space Agency, and partners in a dozen countries around the
globe, IXPE orbits Earth some 340 miles up to observe X-ray emissions from
powerful cosmic phenomena hundreds or thousands of light-years from Earth. In
2023 alone, its subjects of study included blazars such as Markarian 501 and Markarian 421, supernova remnants including Tycho and SN 1006, and the supermassive black hole at the center of our own galaxy.
IXPE also supports study of
unanticipated cosmic events – such as the brightest pulse of high-energy
radiation ever recorded, which swept through
Earth’s solar system in late 2022. IXPE’s success led NASA to formally extend
the mission for an additional 20 months, through at least September 2025.
“We at NASA are incredibly proud of Dr.
Weisskopf and the IXPE team around the world,” said Acting Marshall Center
Director Joseph Pelfrey. “IXPE allows us to look at the universe through a
vantage point never seen before. It’s particularly gratifying to continue
Marshall’s long association with the Rossi Prize, which identifies singular
breakthroughs and unprecedented innovation in high-energy astrophysics – a
field in which our researchers excel.”
Weisskopf, together with Harvard
astrophysicist Harvey Tananbaum, previously received the Rossi Prize in 2004
for their work to develop and fly NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory, which continues to study high-energy X-ray phenomena across the
cosmos. NASA Marshall researchers Gerald Fishman and Colleen Wilson-Hodge also
were awarded the Rossi Prize in 1994 and 2018, respectively. Fishman was
honored for his contributions to the Compton Gamma-ray Observatory’s BATSE (Burst and Transient Source Experiment)
mission. Wilson-Hodge received the honor for her work with the Fermi GBM (Gamma-ray Burst Monitor) in August 2017, detecting gravitational and light waves from the
spectacular smashup of two neutron stars in a distant galaxy.
The Rossi Prize is awarded annually for a
significant recent contribution to high-energy astrophysics. The honor includes
an engraved certificate and a $1,500 award.
Learn more about NASA’s high-energy
astrophysics research:
https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics
Source: NASA’s IXPE Awarded Prestigious Prize in High-energy Astronomy - NASA
No comments:
Post a Comment