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Chapter 18 review answers
Chapter 18 review answers

... radio waves, microwaves, infrared, ultraviolet, xrays, and Gamma rays. 50. Scientists use special telescopes on the ground but primarily up in space to extract electromagnetic waves. They include ultraviolet telescopes, infrared telescopes, gamma-ray telescopes, and x-ray telescopes. They put these ...
PowerPoint - Chandra X
PowerPoint - Chandra X

... by the same team. The authors used over 150 separate Chandra observations spread over 13 years to obtain these results.  These are stellar-mass black hole candidates, which are formed by the collapse of a massive star and typically have masses between five and 10 times that of the Sun.  New techni ...
Big Island Discussions II 08 03 06 - Alt
Big Island Discussions II 08 03 06 - Alt

... might consider using two direct drive motors in altitude, one on each side to avoid twisting the bottom section of the OTA. In azimuth, we first considered using off-the-shelf slim line bearings, but if one were to avoid fork flexures, it would be good to bring the forces straight down from the alti ...
Lecture 18/9 Telescopes Ulf Torkelsson 1 Optics
Lecture 18/9 Telescopes Ulf Torkelsson 1 Optics

... are absorbed by the atmosphere. In order to explore other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum one must take the telescopes outside of the atmosphere. Such instruments have been developed to study infrared, ultraviolet, X-ray and gamma rays. Infrared and ultraviolet telescopes look fairly similar t ...
Telescopes
Telescopes

... • Stick the telescope in space! • One of our best microscopes, the Hubble Space Telescope, has a small mirror but can collect a lot of light due to its location. ...
Answers to pupils` worksheets
Answers to pupils` worksheets

... How does your pupil getting bigger in dim light explain why the Lovell telescope at Jodrell Bank needs to be so big? You pupil gets bigger to collect more light, so you can see fainter objects. In the same way, bigger telescopes can collect more light, to see fainter objects in space. 9. Pupils will ...
the spitzer space telescope mission
the spitzer space telescope mission

... highlight many of the exciting scientific results obtained during the first 6 months of the Spitzer mission. Subject headinggs: space vehicles: instruments — telescopes 1. INTRODUCTION ...
supplemental educational materials PDF
supplemental educational materials PDF

... A scientist who studies the universe and the celestial bodies residing in it, including their location, motion, composition, and history. Many of the scientists at the Space Telescope Science Institute are astronomers. Astronomers from all over the world use the Hubble Space Telescope. ...
25 light years from Earth, there`s a planet about the size of our own
25 light years from Earth, there`s a planet about the size of our own

... By Patrick L. Barry and Dr. Tony Phillips ...
Guide to Deep Space Poster PDF
Guide to Deep Space Poster PDF

... between each crest. Just for a moment think about the familiar colours of the rainbow (or spectrum). At one side we start with red which has a long wavelength, next orange with slightly shorter wavelength, moving through the colours to blue and violet the wavelengths get smaller and smaller. Light w ...
optical telescopes
optical telescopes

... refractors and Catadioptrics since mirrors can be produced at less cost than lenses in medium to large apertures 2. Reasonably compact and portable up to focal lengths of 1000mm. 3. Excellent for faint deep sky objects such as remote galaxies, nebulae and star clusters due to the generally fast foca ...
Observing the Sky
Observing the Sky

... astronomers who determined that there are actually 365.242 days in a year. To solve the problem, a new calendar-the Gregorian calendar was created. The Pope dropped 10 days from the year 1582 and restricted leap years to years that are divisible by 4 but not by 100 (except for years that are divisib ...
Wadhurst Astronomical Society Newsletter May 2017
Wadhurst Astronomical Society Newsletter May 2017

... GAIA will map I billion stars in 3D, which is about 1% of our Milky Way stars. Its accuracy will be about 40 times as great as the Hipparchus mission and 40 million measurements will be taken each day. The CCD array measures half a square meter and contains a billion pixels. During its planned life ...
Astronomers Demonstrate the Global Internet Telescope
Astronomers Demonstrate the Global Internet Telescope

... (JIVE) in the Netherlands, where the 9 Terabits of data were fed in real-time into a specialised supercomputer, called a 'correlator', and combined. The same research networks were then used to deliver the final data product directly to the astronomers who formed the images. Until the network infras ...
Milky Way bubbly
Milky Way bubbly

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Presentazione di PowerPoint

... ...Another instrument A time tagging photon counting array returns data like this: ...
Eagle Nebula - Amazing Space
Eagle Nebula - Amazing Space

... About the Image The Eagle Nebula was photographed by Jeff Hester and Paul Scowen of Arizona State University using the Wide Field and Planetary Camera 2 on board NASA’s Hubble Space Telescope on April 1, 1995. The color picture is made up of three separate color images: red shows light from sulfur a ...
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Sounding-rocket telescope uses new technology ultra-light

... The primary mirror (see Figure 1) has a clear aperture of 50cm, full size of 55cm, and is light weighted 92% (that is, mass is reduced without significant degradation to rigidity) so that it weighs only 4.5kg. ITT Space Systems polished the primary mirror to approximately 7nm root mean square (rms) ...
Chapter 11
Chapter 11

... given amazing views of far away galaxies and stars in space  Using this they were able to find that the universe is ...
pptx format
pptx format

... NEITHER cold or hot! Objects in sunlight heat up, objects in shadow cool down) One important cooled infrared space telescope is called WISE. This telescope has observed infrared radiation from many 10,000s of asteroids ...
Introduction to Telescopes
Introduction to Telescopes

... accumulates on each pixel proportional to the light intensity. When such a chip is attached to an astronomical telescope and exposed for a certain period of time, the pattern of the charges on it represents an image of the region of the sky the telescope is point towards. That pattern can be read ou ...
Lecture 3, Optical and UV Astronomy
Lecture 3, Optical and UV Astronomy

... What effects this? ...
Kuiper Belt - Shades of Blue
Kuiper Belt - Shades of Blue

... Kepler Mission Discovers Worlds Orbiting Two Stars Kepler-16b – (9/15/2011) Kepler-34b and Kepler-35b (1/11/2012) Kepler-38b (Aug 20, 2012) Kepler 47b and 47c (Aug 28, 2012) ...
Name Date Class - Kessler`s Science Class
Name Date Class - Kessler`s Science Class

... eye. Many objects in space send out waves of electromagnetic radiation that are invisible. Among these are radio waves. Radio telescopes are used to gather radio waves from space. Astronomers learn much about the characteristics of objects such as stars and galaxies by studying the radio waves they ...
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James Webb Space Telescope



The James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), previously known as Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST), is a space observatory under construction and scheduled to launch in October 2018. The JWST will offer unprecedented resolution and sensitivity from long-wavelength visible to the mid-infrared, and is a successor instrument to the Hubble Space Telescope and the Spitzer Space Telescope. The telescope features a segmented 6.5-meter (21 ft) diameter primary mirror and will be located near the Earth–Sun L2 point. A large sunshield will keep its mirror and four science instruments below 50 K (−220 °C; −370 °F).JWST's capabilities will enable a broad range of investigations across the fields of astronomy and cosmology. One particular goal involves observing some of the most distant objects in the Universe, beyond the reach of current ground and space based instruments. This includes the very first stars, the epoch of reionization, and the formation of the first galaxies. Another goal is understanding the formation of stars and planets. This will include imaging molecular clouds and star-forming clusters, studying the debris disks around stars, direct imaging of planets, and spectroscopic examination of planetary transits.In gestation since 1996, the project represents an international collaboration of about 17 countries led by NASA, and with significant contributions from the European Space Agency and the Canadian Space Agency. It is named after James E. Webb, the second administrator of NASA, who played an integral role in the Apollo program.The JWST has a history of major cost overruns and delays. The first realistic budget estimates were that the observatory would cost $1.6 billion and launch in 2011. NASA has now scheduled the telescope for a 2018 launch. In 2011, the United States House of Representatives voted to terminate funding, after about $3 billion had been spent and 75 percent of its hardware was in production. Funding was restored in compromise legislation with the US Senate, and spending on the program was capped at $8 billion. As of December 2014, the telescope remained on schedule and within budget, but at risk of further delays.
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