This panoramic view of SPHEREx’s first all-sky
map shows how the sky looks to the telescope. It transitions between
observations of colors emitted by hot hydrogen gas (blue) and cosmic dust
(red), and those primarily emitted by stars.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Launched in March, NASA’s SPHEREx
space telescope has completed its first infrared map of the entire sky in 102
colors. While not visible to the human eye, these 102 infrared wavelengths of
light are prevalent in the cosmos, and observing the entire sky this way
enables scientists to answer big questions, including how a dramatic event that
occurred in the first billionth of a trillionth of a trillionth of a second
after the big bang influenced the 3D distribution of hundreds of millions of
galaxies in our universe. In addition, scientists will use the data to study
how galaxies have changed over the universe’s nearly 14 billion-year history
and learn about the distribution of key ingredients for life in our own
galaxy.
“It’s incredible how much
information SPHEREx has collected in just six months — information that will be
especially valuable when used alongside our other missions’ data to better
understand our universe,” said Shawn Domagal-Goldman, director of the
Astrophysics Division at NASA Headquarters in Washington. “We essentially have
102 new maps of the entire sky, each one in a different wavelength and
containing unique information about the objects it sees. I think every
astronomer is going to find something of value here, as NASA’s missions enable
the world to answer fundamental questions about how the universe got its start,
and how it changed to eventually create a home for us in it.”
Circling Earth about 14½ times a
day, SPHEREx (which stands for Spectro-Photometer for the History of the
Universe, Epoch of Reionization, and Ices Explorer) travels from north to
south, passing over the poles. Each day it takes about 3,600 images along one
circular strip of the sky, and as the days pass and the planet moves around the
Sun, SPHEREx’s field of view shifts as well. After six months, the observatory
has looked out into space in every direction, capturing the entire sky in 360
degrees.
Managed by NASA’s Jet Propulsion
Laboratory in Southern California, the mission began mapping the sky in May and completed its first all-sky mosaic in
December. It will complete three additional all-sky scans during its two-year
primary mission, and merging those maps together will increase the sensitivity
of the measurements. The entire dataset is freely available to scientists and the public.
“SPHEREx is a mid-sized astrophysics mission delivering big science,” said JPL Director Dave Gallagher. “It’s a phenomenal example of how we turn bold ideas into reality, and in doing so, unlock enormous potential for discovery.”
Superpowered telescope
Each of the 102 colors detected by
SPHEREx represents a wavelength of infrared light, and each wavelength provides
unique information about the galaxies, stars, planet-forming regions, and other
cosmic features therein. For example, dense clouds of dust in our galaxy where
stars and planets form radiate brightly in certain wavelengths but emit no
light (and are therefore totally invisible) in others. The process of
separating the light from a source into its component wavelengths is called
spectroscopy.
And while a handful of previous
missions has also mapped the entire sky, such as NASA’s Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, none have done so in nearly as many colors as
SPHEREx. By contrast, NASA’s James Webb Space Telescope can do spectroscopy with significantly more
wavelengths of light than SPHEREx, but with a field of view thousands of times
smaller. The combination of colors and such a wide field of view is why SPHEREx
is so powerful.
“The superpower of SPHEREx is that
it captures the whole sky in 102 colors about every six months. That’s an
amazing amount of information to gather in a short amount of time,” said Beth
Fabinsky, the SPHEREx project manager at JPL. “I think this makes us the mantis
shrimp of telescopes, because we have an amazing multicolor visual detection
system and we can also see a very wide swath of our surroundings.”
To accomplish this feat, SPHEREx
uses six detectors, each paired with a specially designed filter that contains
a gradient of 17 colors. That means every image taken with those six detectors
contains 102 colors (six times 17). It also means that every all-sky map that
SPHEREx produces is really 102 maps, each in a different color.
The observatory will use those colors to measure the distance to hundreds of millions of galaxies. Though the positions of most of those galaxies have already been mapped in two dimensions by other observatories, SPHEREx’s map will be in 3D, enabling scientists to measure subtle variations in the way galaxies are clustered and distributed across the universe.
Each frame of this movie shows the entire sky in
a different infrared wavelength, indicated by the color bar in the top right
corner. Taken by NASA’s SPHEREx observatory, the maps illustrate how viewing
the universe in different wavelengths of light can reveal unique cosmic
features.
Credit: NASA/JPL-Caltech
Those measurements will offer
insights into an event that took place in the first billionth of a trillionth
of a trillionth of a second after the big bang. In this moment, called
inflation, the universe expanded by a trillion-trillionfold. Nothing like it
has occurred in the universe since, and scientists want to understand it
better. The SPHEREx mission’s approach is one way to help in that effort.
More about SPHEREx
The SPHEREx mission is managed by
JPL for NASA’s Astrophysics Division within the Science Mission Directorate in
Washington. The telescope and the spacecraft bus were built by BAE Systems. The
science analysis of the SPHEREx data is being conducted by a team of scientists
at 10 institutions across the U.S., and in South Korea and Taiwan. Data is
processed and archived at IPAC at Caltech in Pasadena, which manages JPL for
NASA. The mission’s principal investigator is based at Caltech with a joint JPL
appointment. The SPHEREx dataset is publicly available.
For more information about the SPHEREx mission visit: https://science.nasa.gov/mission/spherex/
Source: NASA’s
SPHEREx Observatory Completes First Cosmic Map Like No Other - NASA



No comments:
Post a Comment