New NASA space telescope will explore the Big Bang
By Ashley Strickland, CNN
Updated 1939 GMT (0339 HKT) January 7, 2021
(CNN)A new space
telescope will help scientists look back in time at the origin of our universe
and the galaxies and planetary systems that have populated it ever since.
The mission will further our understanding of how the universe rapidly
expanded right after the Big Bang occurred.
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During a two-year run, NASA's SPHEREx space
telescope will map the entire sky four times to create a giant database that
will include galaxies, stars, nebulas and other objects.
The data collected by the space observatory will result in a 3D map of
the sky, making it the first NASA mission to create an all-sky spectroscopy map
in near-infrared light. The name "SPHEREx" is short for
Spectro-Photometer for the History of the Universe, Epoch of Reionization and
Ices Explorer.
The space observatory, which will be similar in size to a subcompact
car, is expected to launch between June 2024 and April 2025.
Tracking countless galaxies and stars
The instruments on SPHEREx will observe the sky in visible light as
well as near-infrared light. The human eye can't see near-infrared light, but
it has helped astronomers to peer into otherwise invisible aspects of space and
learn more about the universe.
Its instruments will use spectroscopy to separate the near-infrared
light the telescope can see into individual wavelengths. This data can shed
light on the composition of an object or even its distance from Earth.
"That's like going from black-and-white images to color; it's like
going from Kansas to Oz," said Allen Farrington, the SPHEREx project
manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, in a statement.
Scientists expect to collect data on more than 300 million near and
distant galaxies -- some of which are so far away that it has taken 10 billion
years for their light to reach Earth.
The telescope will also survey more than 100 million stars in our Milky
Way galaxy while searching for water ice and other organic molecules in star
nurseries and areas around stars where new planets could form. These stellar
birthplaces, where stars come together from gas and dust, could contain
evidence of the ingredients for life.
At the end of the mission, astronomers expect to have a map of the
entire sky that exceeds the resolution of previous similar maps, according to
the agency.
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The SPHEREx space telescope will also be able to identify objects of
interest for other NASA missions to observe with more detail.
Clues from new star formations
The mission team has some specific goals in mind for SPHEREx.
The scientists will be searching for evidence of the inflation of the
universe a split second after the Big Bang, when space as we know it rapidly
expanded. This would have changed how matter was distributed. Evidence of that
inflation may exist in the patterns and positioning of galaxies across the
universe.
Astronomers also want to know more about the history of how galaxies
formed, including those first stars that formed after the Big Bang. Galaxies
put off a faint glow. This glow varies across space depending on the placement
of galaxies because some of them tend to stay in groups called clusters. Maps
created by SPHEREx that break down light into different color bands could
reveal more information about the first galaxies that formed stars.
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By taking a closer look at new stars forming in the Milky Way,
astronomers will also be able to learn more about how young planetary systems
are created. Planets form from the leftovers of star creation -- essentially
disks of gas, dust and water ice swirling together. That leftover water ice
could essentially bring water and other organic molecules to planets -- much
like the way water was delivered to early Earth.
This will tell scientists if our planetary system, which includes Earth
and its ability to support life, is common or rare.
Final design and assembly
Officials at NASA announced this week that the mission has entered
Phase C, which means that the early design plans have been approved and teams
can begin the final design and assemble hardware and software. The California
Institute of Technology and NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory will develop the
instruments on SPHEREx while the spacecraft itself will be built by Ball
Aerospace.
The SPHEREx team will spend the next 29 months building these components
before entering the next mission phase: assembly, testing and launch.
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