I Sure Can't Wait To See What New Astronomical Discoveries Will Be Made With These New Super_Gigantic

I sure can't wait to see what New Astronomical Discoveries will be made with These New Super_Gigantic Observatories that should come online by The End of December 2022.  

Mission To Build World’s Most Advanced Telescope Reaches Major Milestone

Mission to build world’s most advanced telescope reaches major milestone

With the signing last week of a “master agreement" for the Thirty Meter Telescope — destined to be the most advanced and powerful optical telescope in the world — the University of California and UCLA moved a step closer to peering deeper into the cosmos than ever before. Watch: Thirty Meter Telescope (Overview) or via Vimeo

The agreement, signed by UC President Mark Yudof and several international partners, formally outlines the telescope project’s goals, defines the terms of its construction and establishes its governance structure, design and financing.

Work on the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT), named for its 30-meter primary mirror — three times the diameter of the largest existing telescopes — is scheduled to begin in April 2014 atop Hawaii’s dormant Mauna Kea volcano. The TMT’s scientific operations are slated to start in 2022.

UCLA researchers will play a significant role in the development and use of the TMT, which will enable astronomers to study stars and other objects throughout our solar system, the Milky Way and neighboring galaxies, and galaxies forming at the very edge of the observable universe, near the beginning of time.

The project is a collaboration among universities in the United States and institutions in Canada, China, India and Japan, with major funding provided by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.

"UCLA is taking a lead role in defining the science for this monumental, international project," said Andrea Ghez, a professor of physics and astronomy who holds UCLA’s Lauren B. Leichtman and Arthur E. Levine Chair in Astrophysics.

Ghez, who has served on the TMT science advisory committee since its first meeting 13 years ago, described the master agreement as an important milestone for the UC system, UCLA and the field of astronomy.

"One reason why we want to build TMT is to delve into the most fundamental workings of our universe," she said. "It is truly amazing to think about what TMT will teach us about the universe."

image

Creating cutting-edge instruments for the TMT UCLA professor of astronomy James Larkin is one of those excited about the TMT’s potential. He is the principal investigator for the Infrared Imaging Spectrograph (IRIS), one of three scientific instruments that will be ready for use with the TMT when the telescope begins operation.

"IRIS is an imaging spectrograph that perhaps can best be described as a sophisticated camera that takes small images at 2,000 different wavelengths simultaneously," Larkin said. "Or it can be thought of as a spectrograph that takes 10,000 adjacent spectra over a rectangular area of the sky."

The instrument will be able to produce images three times sharper than what is currently achievable with the two powerful W.M. Keck telescopes on Mauna Kea and many times sharper than the Hubble Space Telescope, Larkin said. IRIS will image planets that are forming but are often too dim and red to be detected by smaller telescopes, and it will be the only one of the three TMT instruments to magnify images to the theoretical diffraction limit.

"Exploring the universe at this unprecedented resolution and sensitivity means we will be surprised by what we find," he said. "IRIS has a wide range of science objectives, ranging from chemical analysis of the surfaces of solar system moons like Titan and Europa, to following the evolution of galaxies over the past 13 billion years, to searching for the first stars in the very early universe."

With the most sensitive spectroscopy available anywhere in the near-infrared, IRIS will yield the first real understanding the physical nature of these early galaxies, a key goal of research in cosmology and astrophysics.

IRIS is a joint project involving more than 50 astronomers from the U.S., Canada, Japan and China, and many of the instrument’s most crucial components will be designed and built at UCLA’s Infrared Laboratory for Astrophysics, founded more than 20 years ago by Ian S. McLean, who is the lab’s director and a UCLA professor of physics and astronomy.

The TMT, McLean said, will enable astronomers to see not only much fainter objects but also to resolve them in much greater detail.

"Both of these attributes are crucial for almost all of the frontier areas of modern astrophysics, from studies of nearby exoplanetary systems to probing the most distant objects in the universe," he said. "The TMT is precisely the right kind of scientific tool to complement national facilities under development, such as the James Webb Space Telescope. We are all very excited that the TMT master agreement is signed."

image

In 1989, at the beginning of the era of the twin W.M. Keck telescopes — currently the world’s largest optical and infrared telescopes — UCLA set up its infrared astrophysics lab to develop state-of-the-science instruments for them. All four of the currently operational infrared cameras and spectrometers on the Keck telescopes were built entirely or in part at UCLA. McLean expects UCLA’s infrared lab to play a similar role with the TMT.

The concept of a telescope three times larger and with nine times more light-gathering power than the Keck telescopes was first envisaged nearly 15 years ago, and UCLA has played a major role in defining the type of instruments needed for such a telescope. IRIS, under Larkin’s leadership, is one example, McLean said. Another proposed TMT instrument, the Infrared Multi-Slit Spectrometer (IRMS), will be a near-replica of the successful MOSFIRE instrument that McLean delivered to the W.M. Keck Observatory in 2012. With the sharpest and most sensitive images ever taken in the near infrared, the TMT and IRIS will reveal the universe in new ways, exploring everything from dwarf planets at the orbit of Pluto to the most distant galaxies ever explored near the dawn of time, McLean said.

The twin 10-meter Keck telescopes have "attracted many distinguished faculty, trained students at all levels and served the people of California and the world with inspiring discoveries and technological leadership," said McLean. "The University of California will continue that tradition of leadership and excellence with its participation in the TMT project, and UCLA will play a key role through the development and exploitation of infrared spectroscopy and high-resolution imaging technology."

image

Solving the mysteries of black holes with the TMT UCLA’s Ghez, who leads the development of the Galactic Center project, said her research will be greatly enhanced by the Thirty Meter Telescope.

Ghez and her colleagues discovered a supermassive black hole at the center of the Milky Way that has a mass approximately 4 million times that of our sun. Such mysterious and intriguing black holes, which were predicted by Einstein’s theory of general relativity, provide remarkable laboratories for the study of physics in extreme environments.

The TMT, Ghez said, will identify and map the orbits of fainter stars close to our black hole, extending our knowledge of physics with a fundamental test of Einstein’s theory. Because stars in the vicinity of the black hole will be affected by the presence or absence of dark matter, their orbits will significantly constrain our current model of dark matter, which is central to our understanding of galaxy formation.

TMT will also extend our ability to measure accurate masses of black holes in more distant galaxies and in low-mass galaxies, likely revealing when and how black holes are “fed," Ghez said.

By revealing details about resolved stellar populations in nearby galaxies, the TMT and IRIS will directly probe the formation of nearby stellar systems like our own Milky Way. Because it will be possible to measure the mass distributions of stars in a variety of new environments and in galaxies outside of the Milky Way, IRIS will help scientists learn whether stars form differently under different conditions.

In the distant universe, IRIS’s ability to image and study the internal workings of early galaxies will represent a major breakthrough in the study of galaxy formation during the known peak period of star formation.

The Thirty Meter Telescope is a collaboration of the University of California, the California Institute of Technology, the Association of Canadian Universities for Research in Astronomy, the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan, a consortium of Chinese institutions led by the National Astronomical Observatories of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, and institutions in India supported by India’s Department of Science and Technology.

image

In addition to President Yudof, signatories of the TMT master agreement are Donald E. Brooks, chair of the institutional council of Association of Canadian Universities for Research in Astronomy; Jean-Lou Chameau, president of the California Institute of Technology; Masahiko Hayashi, director general of the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan; P. Sreekumar, director of the Indian Institute of Astrophysics; and Jun Yan, director general of the National Astronomical Observatories of China.

Intel co-founder Gordon Moore and his wife, Betty, established the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation to support bold ideas that create enduring impact in science, environmental conservation and patient care.

UCLA is California’s largest university, with an enrollment of more than 40,000 undergraduate and graduate students. The UCLA College of Letters and Science and the university’s 11 professional schools feature renowned faculty and offer 337 degree programs and majors. UCLA is a national and international leader in the breadth and quality of its academic, research, health care, cultural, continuing education and athletic programs. Six alumni and six faculty have been awarded the Nobel Prize.

via UCLA Newsroom

More Posts from Aspergers1044 and Others

7 years ago
European satellite could discover thousands of planets in Earth’s galaxy (arXiv)
By Morgan Kelly, Office of Communications A recently launched European satellite could reveal tens of thousands of new planets within the next few years, and provide scientists with a far better un…

ESA’s GAIA Mission might reveal a Treasure Trove of Nee Exoplanetary Discoveries!


Tags
8 years ago
Here Are Two Interesting Books To Read. A Star_Wars Atlas And Vistas Of Many Worlds.

Here are two interesting Books to read. A Star_Wars Atlas and Vistas of Many Worlds.

6 years ago

For One Last Night, Make It a Blockbuster Night.


Tags
8 years ago

NASA's Juno_Mission reaches Jupiter on The 4th of July!

Scientists Excited As Juno Nears Jupiter
Scientists Excited As Juno Nears Jupiter
Scientists Excited As Juno Nears Jupiter
Scientists Excited As Juno Nears Jupiter
Scientists Excited As Juno Nears Jupiter

Scientists Excited as Juno Nears Jupiter

http://www.sci-news.com/space/juno-nears-jupiter-03994.html

On the evening of July 4, Juno — a solar-powered spacecraft the size of a basketball court — will fire its main engine for 35 minutes, placing it into a polar orbit around Jupiter

During the flybys, the spacecraft will probe beneath the obscuring cloud cover of the Solar System’s largest planet and study its auroras to learn more about the planet’s origins, structure, atmosphere and massive magnetosphere.

A series of 37 planned close approaches during the mission will eclipse the previous record for Jupiter set in 1974 by NASA’s Pioneer 11 spacecraft of 27,000 miles (43,000 km).


Tags
8 years ago
Astronomers Have a Plan to Slow Down a Spacecraft When it Gets to Alpha Centauri
How do you stop a probe traveling at relativistic speeds? The Max Planck Society is on the case.

Could it be that the way to slow down before arriving at a destination Solar_System is to use Solar_Sails to Reflect Light coming from The Destination Solar_System for a Longtime before entering into The Destination Solar_System? 


Tags
7 years ago
Sanders will host health-care town hall, aiming for online audience bigger than cable
The senator's talk on universal Medicare will be streamed by progressive video outlets.

Really excited for this. Sadly, I’ll be working, but I strongly encourage others (especially on the East coast) to not only watch, but to participate in this awesome opportunity.

Also, if you hate how the mainstream media treats subjects you care about, then this is doubly important. It shows tv outlets that there’s a hunger for real talk about real issues… and if they don’t cover it, citizens will continue to move toward alternative media outlets.

Highlights:

On the evening of Jan. 23, Sanders will host a 90-minute “national town hall” on proposals for universal Medicare, streamed by the progressive video outlets NowThis, Attn:, and the Young Turks. …

“The mainstream media continues to ignore how income inequality and the lack of a decent health-care system devastates the middle class,” said Ana Kasparian, a co-host of the Young Turks’ flagship series. …

The senator will host three segments: one on the current state of health care in the United States, one on the potential economic impact of universal Medicare, and one on how single-payer works in the rest of the developed world. …

10 years ago

Mixing Salts of Different Metals.  

So This Is What Happens When You Mix Salts Of Different Metals (Lithium, Strontium, Sodium, Copper, And

So this is what happens when you mix salts of different metals (Lithium, Strontium, Sodium, Copper, and Potassium) into methanol and then light that sucker.

Pretty colours is what.

Each metal has a different configuration of electrons orbiting in the atom. When the different atoms get energy from the heat, the electrons in the different metals will be excited by a different amount. When they de-excite they release that energy as light. Different metals release different eneriges. Different energies is different colours. The more energy, the violeter the light.

Using different metal salts is also how fireworks do the thing.

See the streetlight yellow in the Sodium (Na)? Well that’s because we use sodium lamps in streetlights


Tags
7 years ago

NASA’s TESS Mission to Search for Lots More EXOPLANETS is now about to be Launched someday really soon!

The Hunt for New Worlds Continues with TESS

We’re getting ready to start our next mission to find new worlds! The Transiting Exoplanet Survey Satellite (TESS) will find thousands of planets beyond our solar system for us to study in more detail. It’s preparing to launch from our Kennedy Space Center at Cape Canaveral in Florida.

image

Once it launches, TESS will look for new planets that orbit bright stars relatively close to Earth. We’re expecting to find giant planets, like Jupiter, but we’re also predicting we’ll find Earth-sized planets. Most of those planets will be within 300 light-years of Earth, which will make follow-up studies easier for other observatories.

image

TESS will find these new exoplanets by looking for their transits. A transit is a temporary dip in a star’s brightness that happens with predictable timing when a planet crosses between us and the star. The information we get from transits can tell us about the size of the planet relative to the size of its star. We’ve found nearly 3,000 planets using the transit method, many with our Kepler space telescope. That’s over 75% of all the exoplanets we’ve found so far!

image

TESS will look at nearly the entire sky (about 85%) over two years. The mission divides the sky into 26 sectors. TESS will look at 13 of them in the southern sky during its first year before scanning the northern sky the year after.

image

What makes TESS different from the other planet-hunting missions that have come before it? The Kepler mission (yellow) looked continually at one small patch of sky, spotting dim stars and their planets that are between 300 and 3,000 light-years away. TESS (blue) will look at almost the whole sky in sections, finding bright stars and their planets that are between 30 and 300 light-years away.

image

TESS will also have a brand new kind of orbit (visualized below). Once it reaches its final trajectory, TESS will finish one pass around Earth every 13.7 days (blue), which is half the time it takes for the Moon (gray) to orbit. This position maximizes the amount of time TESS can stare at each sector, and the satellite will transmit its data back to us each time its orbit takes it closest to Earth (orange).

image

Kepler’s goal was to figure out how common Earth-size planets might be. TESS’s mission is to find exoplanets around bright, nearby stars so future missions, like our James Webb Space Telescope, and ground-based observatories can learn what they’re made of and potentially even study their atmospheres. TESS will provide a catalog of thousands of new subjects for us to learn about and explore.

image

The TESS mission is led by MIT and came together with the help of many different partners. Learn more about TESS and how it will further our knowledge of exoplanets, or check out some more awesome images and videos of the spacecraft. And stay tuned for more exciting TESS news as the spacecraft launches!

Watch the Launch + More!

image

Sunday, April 15 11 a.m. EDT - NASA Social Mission Overview

Join mission experts to learn more about TESS, how it will search for worlds beyond our solar system and what scientists hope to find! Have questions? Use #askNASA to have them answered live during the broadcast.

Watch HERE. 

1 p.m. EDT - Prelaunch News Conference

Get an update on the spacecraft, the rocket and the liftoff operations ahead of the April 16 launch! Have questions? Use #askNASA to have them answered live during the broadcast.

Watch HERE.

3 p.m. EDT - Science News Conference

Hear from mission scientists and experts about the science behind the TESS mission. Have questions? Use #askNASA to have them answered live during the broadcast. 

Watch HERE.

4 p.m. EDT - TESS Facebook Live

This live show will dive into the science behind the TESS spacecraft, explain how we search for planets outside our solar system and will allow you to ask your questions to members of the TESS team. 

Watch HERE. 

Monday, April 16 10 a.m. EDT - NASA EDGE: TESS Facebook Live

This half-hour live show will discuss the TESS spacecraft, the science of searching for planets outside our solar system, and the launch from Cape Canaveral.

Watch HERE.

1 p.m. EDT - Reddit AMA

Join us live on Reddit for a Science AMA to discuss the hunt for exoplanets and the upcoming launch of TESS!

Join in HERE.

6 p.m. EDT - Launch Coverage!

TESS is slated to launch at 6:32 p.m. EDT on a SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket from our Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Watch HERE.

Make sure to follow us on Tumblr for your regular dose of space: http://nasa.tumblr.com


Tags
7 years ago

At Least 94 More Exoplanets were just recently discovered by Astronomers and Astrophysicists using NASA's Kepler Space_Telescope.

Scientists discover almost 100 new exoplanets

“We started out analyzing 275 candidates of which 149 were validated as real exoplanets. In turn 95 of these planets have proved to be new discoveries,” said American PhD student Andrew Mayo at the National Space Institute (DTU Space) at the Technical University of Denmark.

Scientists Discover Almost 100 New Exoplanets

“This research has been underway since the first K2 data release in 2014.”

Mayo is the main author of the work being presented in the Astronomical Journal.

The research has been conducted partly as a senior project during his undergraduate studies at Harvard College. It has also involved a team of international colleagues from institutions such as NASA, Caltech, UC Berkeley, the University of Copenhagen, and the University of Tokyo.

Keep reading


Tags
Loading...
End of content
No more pages to load
  • seekingoath-blog
    seekingoath-blog reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • joejoat
    joejoat reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • joejoat
    joejoat liked this · 9 years ago
  • 0cean-s0ull
    0cean-s0ull liked this · 9 years ago
  • spongie-man
    spongie-man reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • smokinggummybears
    smokinggummybears reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • smokinggummybears
    smokinggummybears liked this · 9 years ago
  • mycosect
    mycosect liked this · 9 years ago
  • deeperminds
    deeperminds liked this · 9 years ago
  • universalm
    universalm liked this · 9 years ago
  • deeper-than-a-kiddy-pool
    deeper-than-a-kiddy-pool liked this · 9 years ago
  • girlies-world
    girlies-world reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • schmizabel
    schmizabel liked this · 9 years ago
  • agentnorth
    agentnorth liked this · 9 years ago
  • capitandequeso
    capitandequeso reblogged this · 9 years ago
  • capitandequeso
    capitandequeso liked this · 9 years ago
  • ironstarren-blog
    ironstarren-blog liked this · 10 years ago
  • design--spaces
    design--spaces reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • registeredhypercam2
    registeredhypercam2 reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • thestarsbeckon
    thestarsbeckon reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • mewbin
    mewbin reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • rollership
    rollership liked this · 11 years ago
  • philargus
    philargus liked this · 11 years ago
  • lovelyuniversee
    lovelyuniversee reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • moonlightsyd
    moonlightsyd liked this · 11 years ago
  • search-the-castle-blog
    search-the-castle-blog reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • veracidadchannel
    veracidadchannel liked this · 11 years ago
  • betazoidpantsuit
    betazoidpantsuit reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • betazoidpantsuit
    betazoidpantsuit liked this · 11 years ago
  • c610
    c610 reblogged this · 11 years ago
  • capslockaldi
    capslockaldi liked this · 11 years ago
  • milehighdaddy
    milehighdaddy liked this · 11 years ago
  • onecatalyst
    onecatalyst liked this · 11 years ago
aspergers1044 - Looking Forward to The Future
Looking Forward to The Future

My First Tumblr Blog

126 posts

Explore Tumblr Blog
Search Through Tumblr Tags