NASA’s SPHEREx observatory undergoes integration and
testing at BAE Systems in Boulder, Colorado, in April 2024. The space telescope
will use a technique called spectroscopy across the entire sky, capturing the
universe in more than 100 colors.
BAE Systems
The space telescope will detect over 100 colors from hundreds of millions
of stars and galaxies. Here’s what astronomers will do with all that color.
NASA’s SPHEREx mission won’t be the
first space telescope to observe hundreds of millions of stars and galaxies
when it launches no later than April 2025, but it will be the first to observe
them in 102 colors. Although these colors aren’t visible to the human eye
because they’re in the infrared range, scientists will use them to learn about
topics that range from the physics that governed the universe less than a
second after its birth to the origins of water on planets like Earth.
“We are the first mission to look
at the whole sky in so many colors,” said SPHEREx Principal Investigator Jamie
Bock, who is based jointly at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and Caltech,
both in Southern California. “Whenever astronomers look at the sky in a new
way, we can expect discoveries.”
Short for Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and Ices Explorer, SPHEREx will collect infrared light, which has wavelengths slightly longer than what the human eye can detect. The telescope will use a technique called spectroscopy to take the light from hundreds of millions of stars and galaxies and separate it into individual colors, the way a prism transforms sunlight into a rainbow. This color breakdown can reveal various properties of an object, including its composition and its distance from Earth.
NASA’s SPHEREx mission will use spectroscopy —
the splitting of light into its component wavelengths — to study the universe.
Watch this video to learn more about spectroscopy. NASA’s Goddard Space Flight
Center
Here are the three key science
investigations SPHEREx will conduct with its colorful all-sky map.
Cosmic Origins
What human eyes perceive as colors
are distinct wavelengths of light. The only difference between colors is the
distance between the crests of the light wave. If a star or galaxy is moving,
its light waves get stretched or compressed, changing the colors they appear to
emit. (It’s the same with sound waves, which is why the pitch of an ambulance
siren seems to go up as its approaches and lowers after it passes.) Astronomers
can measure the degree to which light is stretched or compressed and use that
to infer the distance to the object.
SPHEREx will apply this principle
to map the position of hundreds of millions of galaxies in 3D. By doing so,
scientists can study the physics of inflation, the event that caused the
universe to expand by a trillion-trillion fold in less than a second after the
big bang. This rapid expansion amplified small differences in the distribution
of matter. Because these differences remain imprinted on the distribution of
galaxies today, measuring how galaxies are distributed can tell scientists more
about how inflation worked.
Galactic
Origins
SPHEREx will also measure the
collective glow created by all galaxies near and far — in other words, the
total amount of light emitted by galaxies over cosmic history. Scientists have
tried to estimate this total light output by observing individual galaxies and
extrapolating to the trillions of galaxies in the universe. But these counts
may leave out some faint or hidden light sources, such as galaxies too small or
too distant for telescopes to easily detect.
With spectroscopy, SPHEREx can also
show astronomers how the total light output has changed over time. For example,
it may reveal that the universe’s earliest generations of galaxies produced
more light than previously thought, either because they were more plentiful or
bigger and brighter than current estimates suggest. Because light takes time to
travel through space, we see distant objects as they were in the past. And, as
light travels, the universe’s expansion stretches it, changing its wavelength and
its color. Scientists can therefore use SPHEREx data to determine how far light
has traveled and where in the universe’s history it was released.
Water’s
Origins
SPHEREx will measure the abundance
of frozen water, carbon dioxide, and other essential ingredients for life as we
know it along more than 9 million unique directions across the Milky Way
galaxy. This information will help scientists better understand how available
these key molecules are to forming planets. Research indicates that most of the
water in our galaxy is in the form of ice rather than gas, frozen to the
surface of small dust grains. In dense clouds where stars form, these icy dust
grains can become part of newly forming planets, with the potential to create
oceans like the ones on Earth.
The mission’s colorful view will
enable scientists to identify these materials, because chemical elements and
molecules leave a unique signature in the colors they absorb and emit.
Big Picture
Many space telescopes, including
NASA’s Hubble and James Webb, can provide high-resolution, in-depth spectroscopy of individual objects
or small sections of space. Other space telescopes, like NASA’s retired Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE), were designed to take images of the
whole sky. SPHEREx combines these abilities to apply spectroscopy to the entire
sky.
By combining observations from
telescopes that target specific parts of the sky with SPHEREx’s big-picture
view, scientists will get a more complete — and more colorful — perspective of
the universe.
More About
SPHEREx
SPHEREx is managed by JPL for NASA’s Astrophysics Division within the Science Mission Directorate in Washington. BAE Systems (formerly Ball Aerospace) built the telescope and the spacecraft bus. The science analysis of the SPHEREx data will be conducted by a team of scientists located at 10 institutions across the U.S. and in South Korea. Data will be processed and archived at IPAC at Caltech, which manages JPL for NASA. The mission principal investigator is based at Caltech with a joint JPL appointment. The SPHEREx dataset will be publicly available.
Source: Why NASA’s SPHEREx Mission Will Make ‘Most Colorful’ Cosmic Map Ever - NASA
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