Title: | Space Exploration |
Notice: | Shuttle launch schedules, see Note 6 |
Moderator: | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN |
Created: | Mon Feb 17 1986 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 974 |
Total number of notes: | 18843 |
Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: NASA spacecraft to look out into space, back in time (Forwarded) Date: 9 Oct 89 05:34:28 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA Paula Cleggett-Haleim Headquarters, Washington, D.C. October 5, 1989 Carter Dove Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. RELEASE: 89-158 NASA SPACECRAFT TO LOOK OUT INTO SPACE, BACK IN TIME NASA will launch a spacecraft on Nov. 9, 1989, to study the origin and dynamics of the Universe, including the theory that the universe began about 15 billion years ago with a cataclysmic explosion - the Big Bang. The Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) spacecraft will be boosted into an Earth polar orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., aboard the final NASA-owned, NASA-launched Delta vehicle. By measuring the diffuse infrared radiation (cosmic background) that bombards Earth from every direction, COBE's instruments will help clarify such matters as the nature of the primeval explosion -- which started the expansion of the universe and made it uniform -- and the processes leading to the formation of galaxies. From its orbit 559 miles above Earth, COBE will carry out its cosmic search using three sophisticated instruments: the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR), Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) and Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) DRM will determine whether the primeval explosion was equally intense in all directions. Patchy brightness in the cosmic microwave background would unmask the as-yet-unknown "seeds" that led to the formation of such large bodies as galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and clusters of clusters of galaxies. Measurements of equal brightness in all directions would mean the puzzle of how these systems could have condensed since the Big Bang will be even more vexing than it is today. To distinguish the emissions of our own Milky Way galaxy from the true cosmic background radiation, DMR will measure radiation from space at wavelengths of 3.3, 5.7 and 9.6 millimeters. FIRAS, covering wavelengths from 0.1 to 10 millimeters, will survey the sky twice during the year-long mission to determine the spectrum (brightness versus wavelength) of the cosmic background radiation from the Big Bang. The spectrum that would result from a simple Big Bang can be calculated with great accuracy. Such a spectrum would be smooth and uniform and have no significant releases of energy between the time of the Big Bang and the formation of galaxies. If FIRAS' measurements depart from the predicted spectrum, scientists will know that powerful energy sources existed in the early universe between these times. These sources may include annihilation of antimatter, matter falling into "black holes," decay of new kinds of elementary particles, explosion of supermassive objects and the turbulent motions that may have caused the formation of galaxies. FIRAS' sensitivity will be 100 times greater than that achieved so far by equivalent ground-based and balloon-borne instruments. Producing a spectrum for each of 1,000 parts of the sky, the FIRAS data will allow scientists to measure how much light was radiated by the Big Bang. DIRBE will search for the diffuse glow of the universe beyond our galaxy in the wavelength range from 1 to 300 micrometers. In the final analysis, any uniform infrared radiation that remains will be very rich in information about the early universe. One possible source would be light from primordial galaxies shifted into the far infrared by the expansion of the universe. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., designed and built the 5,000-pound spacecraft and its three infrared- and microwave-measuring instruments. Goddard also will manage the launch and analyze the data returned by COBE during its 1-year nominal mission. Looking out into space, back in time, the COBE spacecraft will undertake the esoteric task of providing new insights into the origin and evolution of the Universe. Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: NASA to further develop 2 Explorer scientific spacecraft (Forwarded) Date: 9 Oct 89 05:35:47 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA Paula Cleggett-Haleim Headquarters, Washington, D.C. October 5, 1989 RELEASE: 89-159 NASA TO FURTHER DEVELOP 2 EXPLORER SCIENTIFIC SPACECRAFT NASA has authorized further development for two unmanned scientific spacecraft that would explore interplanetary space and study extragalactic light sources, such as quasars. These studies were submitted to NASA under the Explorer Concept program, designed to develop intermediate-size scientific experiments. The two programs are: the Lyman Far Ultraviolet Spectroscopic Explorer (FUSE) and the Advanced Composition Explorer (ACE). FUSE will use high resolution spectroscopy at wavelengths below 1200 angstrom to measure faint sources both throughout the Milky Way galaxy and at very large extragalactic distances. The science team leader for FUSE is Dr. H. Warren Moos, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Md. ACE will explore the energetic particle populations observed in near-Earth interplanetary space. Measurements of these particles will allow a direct study of interstellar matter. The science team leader for ACE is Dr. E. C. Stone, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena. The cost for this phase of development, which includes definition studies and preliminary designs, is approximately $3 million for each spacecraft. The Astrophysics Division of NASA's Office of Space Science and Applications, Washington, D.C., will provide overall program management. Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., will be the project management center.
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566.1 | COBE launch delayed until November 19 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Oct 30 1989 11:49 | 24 |
Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Launch Advisory: COBE launch delayed (Forwarded) Date: 28 Oct 89 05:02:57 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA Jim Cast Headquarters, Washington, D.C. George Diller Kennedy Space Center, Fla. LAUNCH ADVISORY: COBE LAUNCH DELAYED The planned November 9 launch of the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) spacecraft from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., has been delayed until November 19. In addition to a delay which occurred when the McDonnell Douglas Delta launch support team was required on the East Coast to support a recent Department of Defense mission, the COBE was further delayed due to a leak in the Delta launch vehicle's second stage fuel tank shutoff valve - a valve which must be replaced. | |||||
566.2 | COBE Press Kit | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Nov 13 1989 12:29 | 955 |
Date: 9 Nov 89 00:21:59 GMT Subject: COBE Press Kit (Forwarded). PUBLIC AFFAIRS CONTACTS Paula Cleggett-Haleim Office of Space Science and Applications NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. (Phone: 202/453-1547) Jim Cast Office of Space Flight NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. (Phone: 202/453-8536) Carter Dove/Jim Elliott Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. (Phone: 301/286-5566) George Diller/Dick Young Kennedy Space Center, Fla. (Phone: 407/867-2468) CONTENTS General Press Release Cosmic Background Explorer Summary------------------------4 The Cosmic Background Explorer Mission--------------------4 Major Mission Events----------------------------------6 COBE Mission Phases-----------------------------------7 Observatory/Instrument Checkout-----------------------7 Mission Operations------------------------------------9 Mission Lifetime--------------------------------------9 COBE Science----------------------------------------------9 COBE Science Questions-------------------------------12 Cobe Instruments-------------------------------------12 Launch Vehicle Preparation-------------------------------14 Testing and Modifications----------------------------14 Vehicle Assembly-------------------------------------14 Launch Pad Refurbishment-----------------------------15 Delta/COBE Launch Readiness--------------------------15 COBE Mission Management----------------------------------15 Science Working Group------------------------------------16 Contractors----------------------------------------------17 GENERAL PRESS RELEASE NASA SPACECRAFT TO LOOK OUT INTO SPACE, BACK IN TIME NASA will launch a spacecraft on Nov. 17, 1989, to study the origin and dynamics of the universe, including the theory that the universe began about 15 billion years ago with a cataclysmic explosion -- the Big Bang. The Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) spacecraft will be boosted into an Earth polar orbit from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., aboard the final NASA-owned, NASA-launched Delta vehicle. By measuring the diffuse infrared radiation (cosmic background) that bombards Earth from every direction, COBE's instruments will help clarify such matters as the nature of the primeval explosion -- which started the expansion of the universe and made it uniform -- and the processes leading to the formation of galaxies. From its orbit 559 miles above Earth, COBE will carry out its cosmic search using three sophisticated instruments: the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR), Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) and Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE). DMR will determine whether the primeval explosion was equally intense in all directions. Patchy brightness in the cosmic microwave background would unmask the as-yet-unknown "seeds" that led to the formation of such large bodies as galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and clusters of clusters of galaxies. Measurements of equal brightness in all directions would mean the puzzle of how these systems could have condensed since the Big Bang will be even more vexing than it is today. To distinguish the emissions of our own Milky Way galaxy from the true cosmic background radiation, DMR will measure radiation from space at wavelengths of 3.3, 5.7 and 9.6 millimeters. FIRAS, covering wavelengths from 0.1 to 10 millimeters, will survey the sky twice during the year-long mission to determine the spectrum (brightness versus wavelength) of the cosmic background radiation from the Big Bang. - 2 - The spectrum that would result from a simple Big Bang can be calculated with great accuracy. Such a spectrum would be smooth and uniform and have no significant releases of energy between the time of the Big Bang and the formation of galaxies. If FIRAS' measurements depart from the predicted spectrum, scientists will know that powerful energy sources existed in the early universe between these times. These sources may include annihilation of antimatter, matter falling into "black holes," decay of new kinds of elementary particles, explosion of supermassive objects and the turbulent motions that may have caused the formation of galaxies. FIRAS' sensitivity will be 100 times greater than that achieved so far by equivalent ground-based and balloon-borne instruments. Producing a spectrum for each of 1,000 parts of the sky, the FIRAS data will allow scientists to measure how much light was radiated by the Big Bang. DIRBE will search for the diffuse glow of the universe beyond our galaxy in the wavelength range from 1 to 300 micrometers. In the final analysis, any uniform infrared radiation that remains will be very rich in information about the early universe. One possible source would be light from primordial galaxies shifted into the far infrared by the expansion of the universe. The 5,000-pound spacecraft and its three infrared- and microwave-measuring instruments were designed and built for the Office of Space Science and Applications by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. Goddard also will manage the launch and analyze the data returned by COBE during its 1-year nominal mission. Looking out into space, back in time, the COBE spacecraft will undertake the esoteric task of providing new insights into the origin and evolution of the universe. - end - COSMIC BACKGROUND EXPLORER SUMMARY MISSION: During the 2-year mission, COBE will determine the spectrum of the cosmic background radiation, search for radiation from the very first stars and galaxies and map the cosmic background radiation with unprecedented accuracy. COBE will study the physical conditions in the very early universe and the onset of organization following the Big Bang. LAUNCH: No earlier than 11/16/89, aboard a Delta 5920 ELV, from Space Launch Complex 2 - West, Western Space and Missile Center, Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. Launch window is 1/2 hour beginning at 6:24 a.m. PST. An Advanced Range Instrumentation Aircraft will cover the down-range burn of the Delta rocket. ORBIT: 559-mile, sun-synchronous, near polar orbit, will circle the globe 14 times a day. SCIENCE DATA: Once a day, data are transmitted to Goddard Space Flight Center's Wallops Processing Flight Facility then forwarded to the COBE Science Data Center at GSFC. SPACECRAFT: With 3 solar arrays deployed, 16 feet long, 28 feet in diameter, weighing 5,000 lbs. INSTRUMENTS: Differential Microwave Radiometer, Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment and the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer. NOTE: a) Explorers are relatively small, free-flying scientific spacecraft. b) COBE is the 65th Explorer mission. c) COBE has the most sensitive detectors ever flown in a space mission. d) COBE will use the 184th and last NASA-owned Delta. THE COSMIC BACKGROUND EXPLORER MISSION NASA's COBE mission will produce the most comprehensive observations to date of the early universe. The wavelength band to be studied by COBE includes the cosmic background radiation or so-called "remnant radiation," believed to be the signature of the primeval cosmic explosion, the "Big Bang." Current theory also holds that this band contains radiation characteristic of the formation of the first galaxies and stars. It also might provide evidence of other exotic and energetic events occurring in the epochs between the Big Bang and the formation of galaxies. - 5 - COBE will carry three sophisticated, state-of-the-art instruments to study the background radiation: the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR), the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) and the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE). Because the diffuse cosmic background radiation itself is extremely faint, the COBE spacecraft and its three experiments have been designed to allow observations at unprecedented sensitivities. To that end, the spacecraft will carry the instruments high above the Earth's atmosphere, protect them from the light and heat of the sun and the Earth, supply them with electrical power and commands and transmit the data they accumulate to the ground. Two of the three science instruments aboard the spacecraft, FIRAS and DIRBE, reside in a Dewar -- a giant "thermos bottle" -- filled with liquid helium to provide a stable, low-temperature environment within 2 degrees Celsius of absolute zero. The COBE spacecraft weighs 5,000 pounds, is 16 feet long and is 28 feet in diameter with its three solar panels deployed. The upper half of the observatory is the instrument module, consisting of the three instruments, the liquid helium Dewar and a shield that is deployed when COBE reaches its orbit to protect the instruments from radiation from the sun and the Earth. Directly under the instrument module is the spacecraft module which includes the mechanical support structure, the attitude control system and the spacecraft and instrument electronics. To allow its instruments to scan the sky, COBE will spin on its axis at a rate of 0.8 rpm. COBE's attitude control system will keep the spin axis pointed almost directly away from the Earth and 94 degrees away from the sun. The sophisticated attitude control system is comprised of sun and Earth sensors, reaction wheels to provide control torque from the Earth's magnetic field, a pair of large rotating momentum wheels, electromagnets to transfer excess angular momentum from the spacecraft to the Earth's magnetic field and a complex set of control electronics. Monitoring of the status of the spacecraft and operational commands from the ground will go through the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS). The science data from the instruments will be recorded on two onboard tape recorders and played back to a ground receiving station at Wallops Island, Va., once a day. These data then will be forwarded to the science team at the COBE Science Data Center, Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. COBE will be launched by a two-stage Delta 5920 launch vehicle from Space Launch Complex 2 West at the Western Space and Missile Center, Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. - 6 - COBE will be placed into a circular, near polar orbit 559 miles above the surface of the Earth. Because the plane of the orbit will be inclined 99 degrees to the Equator, the orbital plane will precess (turn) approximately 1 degree per day, thus maintaining a constant orientation of the spacecraft and its orbit with respect to the sun. COBE's nominal mission lifetime is 1 year, allowing its instruments to scan the entire sky at least twice. The actual operational lifetime of the FIRAS and DIRBE instruments may be somewhat longer and will be determined by the rate at which the liquid helium boils away as heat flows into the dewar. It is anticipated that the spacecraft will be operated for a second year to allow the DMR to repeat its scans of the sky and achieve even greater sensitivity. The Delta 5920 is approximately 116 feet long and a maximum of 8 feet in diameter. The first stage is a modified Thor booster incorporating nine Castor 4A strap-on, solid-fuel rocket motors. The first stage main engine is gimbal-mounted and uses liquid oxygen and kerosene. The second stage has a gimbal- mounted, pressure-fed restartable engine fueled with liquid nitrogen tetroxide and aerozene 50. Injection into the final mission orbit is accomplished at completion of the second burn of the Delta second stage, approximately 1 hour after lift-off. An 8-foot diameter fairing protects the spacecraft from aerodynamic heating during the boost and is jettisoned as soon as the vehicle leaves the sensible atmosphere (shortly after second stage ignition). The fairing separation initiates signals to the spacecraft to properly configure the dewar vent valves in the observatory cryogenic cooler. MAJOR MISSION EVENTS Once the final mission orbit is reached, the Delta reorients to the required separation attitude and the Delta inertial guidance computer sends a signal to the spacecraft signal conditioning unit to start deployment. That sequence begins with the RF/thermal shield deployment prior to spacecraft separation from the second stage. The COBE spacecraft is attached to the second stage Delta by a 6019 payload attach fitting. Because the spacecraft requires a near-zero tip-off rate at separation, a two-step release system, consisting of three explosive nuts and a secondary latch system will be used. At spacecraft separation, the Delta vehicle second stage will use cold gas to back away from the COBE spacecraft. The signal conditioning unit then initiates momentum wheel spin-up, solar array deployment, transmitter turn-on and antenna deployment. The dewar cover is deployed by ground command approximately 4 days after separation. - 7 - Three solar arrays provide 712 watts of power to the 5,000- lb. spacecraft. During solar eclipses, batteries will be used to support the power loads and will be recharged during the sunlit portion of the orbit. COBE MISSION PHASES LAUNCH Location: Space Launch Complex 2-West (SLC-2W), Western Space and Missile Center, Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. Time/Date: 6:24 a.m. (PST),Thurs., Nov. 17, 1989 with a launch window of 30 minutes. Launch vehicle: Delta expendable launch vehicle (ELV) model 5920. EARLY ORBIT Liftoff (LO) +57 min., 21 sec.: The COBE spacecraft will be placed into its operational orbit of 559 miles by the second stage of the Delta 5920. LO+60 min., 28 sec.: The Delta ELV sends discrete signals to start COBE's signal conditioning unit (SCU) -- a sophisticated electronic timer -- as the Delta is reoriented to the attitude required for the spacecraft to separate from the Delta. LO+60 min., 29 sec.: The COBE SCU turns on the telemetry transmitter. LO+60 min., 30 sec.: The SCU initiates thermal/radio frequency shield deployment. LO+61 min., 30-45 sec.: The Delta second stage releases and backs away from the COBE. LO+61 min., 49 sec. to 62 min., 7 sec.: The SCU initiates momentum wheel spin-up, solar array deployment and antenna deployment. OBSERVATORY/INSTRUMENT CHECK-OUT There will be a 14-day checkout phase, followed by an additional 16-day instrument characterization and calibration phase. During this phase, transition to normal survey operations will occur. After initial ground contact at separation, communications between COBE and the Earth will be via the Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS). During observatory checkout, TDRSS support on an every orbit basis will be requested, to be gradually reduced over a transition period. - 8 - Once the observatory and instruments have been fully checked, characterized and calibrated (approximately 30 days after launch), an S-band, single access forward and return link will be required for up to 2 hours per day. The 2-hour total time will be scheduled over a 24-hour period on an every-other- orbit basis (15 orbits per day). The observatory engineering checkout extends from day 1 through day 3; the instrument engineering checkout goes from day 3 through day 14; and the instrument characterization and calibration phase lasts from day 15 through day 30. In addition, the day-to-day schedule will plan the following. Day 1: RF acquisition, attitude stabilization and spacecraft subsystem initialization. Day 2: Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) instrument power up and calibration, and spacecraft subsystem checkout (including attitude maneuvers). Day 3: Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) and Diffuse Infrared Background Explorer (DIRBE) instrument power up. Day 4: Attitude maneuver and dewar cover ejection (by ground command from the Payload Operations Control Center at GSFC). Day 5: FIRAS instrument mechanism unlatching and additional instrument engineering checkout. Day 6: Spacecraft spin-up to operational spin rate (0.815 rpm). Day 7: Attitude pitch maneuver checkout. Day 8: Attitude roll maneuver checkout and additional instrument checkout. Day 9-11: Instrument checkout aided by attitude roll and pitch maneuvers. Day 12-14: Instrument checkout and survey mode parameters adjustments. During the characterization and calibration phase, the instruments collect science data, are calibrated and are further characterized as orbital and astronomical events occur. By day 30 the instruments have been calibrated, characterized and adjusted to proceed with normal survey operations. - 9 - MISSION OPERATIONS The COBE flight operations team will control the COBE spacecraft from the Payload Operations Control Center, Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., 24 hours a day, 7 days a week following launch. During this time, the following data events are programmed daily: o Real-time contact by the flight operations team through TDRSS every other COBE orbit. This contact will allow for up- link of stored commands once a day; monitoring of subsystems for health and safety; collection of tracking data and updating of the COBE clock drift. This will maintain clock accuracy within 10 milliseconds of Universal Time. o One onboard tape recorder playback transmitted each day to Wallops Flight Facility (WFF), Va., for data relay to the COBE Science Data Room at Goddard Space Flight Center. At the 655.4 kilobits per second data dump rate, 24 hours of recorded data can be transmitted to Wallops in about 9 minutes. There will be a minimum of three passes within range of the WFF ground station each day. These passes will be a minimum of 10 minutes long and will occur at nearly the same time each day. This regularity will be used to routinely schedule the data acquisitions. MISSION LIFETIME COBE is planned to operate for 24 months following launch. The nominal mission lifetime is 12 months. Minimum mission lifetimes to complete an all-sky survey are 6 months for FIRAS and DIRBE and 12 months for DMR. FIRAS and DIRBE are planned to operate until the liquid cryogen is exhausted, while the short wavelength dectors on DIRBE can operate somewhat longer, current estimate is 14 months. DMR is planned to operate for the full 24 months. COBE SCIENCE Cosmology, the study of the earliest beginnings and the largest structures in the universe, has been the subject of speculation for thousands of years. Early in the twentieth century a remarkable combination of technology and new physical theory led scientists to put forward the Big Bang theory of the origin and evolution of the universe. Some 25 years ago that theory received its strongest observational support to date with the discovery of the cosmic background radiation. COBE's mission is to investigate the cosmic background radiation in sufficient detail to uncover the nature of the fundamental processes which have shaped the universe as seen today. - 10 - The first step in the evolution of modern cosmology was development of the general theory of relativity by Albert Einstein. Subsequently, in 1917, Willem de Sitter applied Einstein's equations to the universe as a whole with the startling result that the universe was not required to be static, but instead that the universe was likely in a state of expansion or collapse. In the 1920's, Edwin Hubble provided the first observational confirmation of this picture through his pioneering work on faint nebulae. Hubble proved that many of the nebulae were galaxies, huge collections of stars similar to the Milky Way galaxy, and also showed that these distant galaxies were receding from the Earth. The nature of the recession was that the farther a galaxy lies from the Earth, the higher is its recessional velocity. Since the universe was observed to be in a state of expansion, it was natural to deduce that the universe was smaller in the past. In fact, the evidence has led to the astounding conclusion that the galaxies were crowded together into a small, extremely dense volume, whose explosive expansion began some 15 billion years ago and has been dubbed The Big Bang. In the 1940's, George Gamow, Ralph Alpher and Robert Herman theorized that the early universe was not only extraordinarily dense, but also was extremely hot. This led them to suggest that the nuclear reactions taking place in such a hot, dense environment accounted for the abundances of hydrogen and helium seen in the universe today, together with a small fraction of heavier elements. Alpher and Herman showed that another consequence of the hot Big Bang theory is that the universe should be filled with the radiation emitted by the hot matter. That is, if scientists can look out in space, back in time to that distant early epoch, then they should see the glow of the initial fireball. In 1964, Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson of the Bell Telephone Laboratories, using a new and very sensitive microwave receiver and antenna, found an unexplained source of noise or static which came to their antenna equally from all parts of the sky. Their discovery sparked a number of independent observations and theoretical analyses to characterize the background radiation which they had found. Today the evidence is overwhelming that Penzias and Wilson provided the first glimpse back to the primeval fireball which emerged from the Big Bang. Since the initial measurements, study of the cosmic background radiation has been the subject of hundreds of experiments throughout the world, using ground-based, balloon- and rocket-borne telescopes. Because the radiation is faint and easily distorted by the Earth's atmosphere, the investigation of the relic radiation from such sites is limited confirmation of the general shape of the spectrum and its overall uniformity. - 11 - However, hidden in the details of the spectral shape and spatial distribution of the background radiation are essential clues to the nature of the fundamental processes which shaped the early universe and produced the universe as it appears today. COBE's instruments are designed to make full use of the vantage point of space to examine the cosmic background radiation with unprecedented sensitivity across a broad range of wavelengths. COBE will scan the sky to look for spatial non- uniformities at a sensitivity level many times what has been possible to date. It will search the spectrum of the relic radiation for deviations from the simplest predicted shape, and it will carefully dissect the radiation at shorter wavelengths to look for evidence of the first stars and galaxies. COBE's search for variations in the brightness of the cosmic background radiation across the sky is designed to probe the mystery surrounding the formation of galaxies and clusters of galaxies in the universe. To the present level of measurement accuracy, the background radiation appears smooth, characteristic of an early universe with an extraordinary degree of uniformity in its density and temperature. Yet examination of the present day universe reveals a great deal of non-uniformity: stars are collected into galaxies, galaxies are gathered into clusters and even these gigantic clusters of galaxies may themselves be clustered into even more immense structures. Enormous voids, regions of space with almost no galaxies, exist between the clusters. Theory indicates that the seeds of this universal structure must have been present in the early universe and the imprint of these seeds must be found as brightness variations in the relic radiation. COBE has the sensitivity to search for the smallest conceivable brightness differences which are consistent with modern theory. COBE's investigation of the detailed spectral shape of the remnant radiation is motivated by the suggestion that enormously powerful and energetic processes may have taken place in the interval of time after the Big Bang and before the formation of galaxies. For example, if massive black holes existed and swallowed large quantities of matter, the resulting energy release would have been sufficient to distort the spectrum of the fireball radiation to a degree measureable by COBE. Exotic processes, some of which have been suggested on the basis of modern theories of high energy particle physics, also have the potential of releasing immense quantities of radiative energy into the early universe and distorting the spectrum of the cosmic background radiation. COBE will characterize the shape of the spectrum of the relic radiation at such a level of precision as to allow detailed study of the nature of these postulated energetic events. - 12 - COBE's measurement of the diffuse background at wavelengths shorter than those characteristic of the remnant radiation from the initial fireball is intended to look for the radiation from the earliest stages of galaxy and star formation. This faint signature must be detected against the foreground radiation from the solar system, the Milky Way galaxy and other nearby galaxies. Detection of this signature requires the observational sensitivity and stability that has been carefully engineered into the COBE system. Study of the radiation from the protogalaxies and protostars will aid scientists to probe into the nature of galaxy and star formation. COBE SCIENCE QUESTIONS COBE will produce a complete map of the sky at each of 100 different wavelengths to answer three primary questions: 1. What is the variation in brightness of the cosmic background radiation across the sky? 2. Does the cosmic background radiation have the spectrum predicted by contemporary cosmological theory? 3. Can we detect the accumulated light from the first stars and galaxies? COBE INSTRUMENTS COBE's three instruments -- the Differential Microwave Radiometer, the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer and the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment -- will be able to observe the entire sky at least twice during the nominal mission lifetime of one year. Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) This instrument will search for minute differences in the brightness of background radiation between different parts of the sky. The DMR is capable of detecting brightness variations that are many times fainter than limits set by current observations and may reveal previously undiscovered physical phenomena. To distinguish the radiation of our galaxy from the true cosmic background radiation, the DMR will map the sky at three wavelengths: 3.3, 5.7, and 9.6 millimeters. To accomplish this, it will have six receivers, two for each wavelength, mounted so that neither the sun nor Earth will shine directly on them. Each receiver will sensitively measure the difference in microwave power entering two antennae looking at different parts of the sky. - 13 - Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) This instrument will survey the sky to search for deviations in the spectrum of the cosmic background radiation from spectrum predicted on the basis of the simple Big Bang model. FIRAS, as well as the DMR, can resolve the sky into 1,000 separate picture elements and will produce a spectrum for each element. Scientists will be able to compare the spectrum produced by COBE against predicted spectra with at least 100 times better accuracy than ever before. FIRAS looks out along the spin axis of the spacecraft. It does not scan the sky as rapidly as the other two instruments onboard COBE but will nevertheless scan the entire sky twice during the nominal mission. FIRAS will detect radiation by using a trumpet-shaped cone antenna. Four detectors, each a tiny silicon resistance thermometer glued to a piece of blackened diamond only one thousandth of an inch thick, are used to detect the radiation collected by the cone antenna. The diamond absorbs the infinitesimal heat from the cosmic background radiation and conducts this heat to the thermometer where the temperature is measured electrically. The data collected by FIRAS will be carefully analyzed to determine any deviations from the theoretically predicted spectrum. Even the slightest discrepancy between measurement and theory will have great significance for cosmology. Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) This instrument will search for the light from the earliest stars and galaxies, luminous energy that is thought to have been produced some 200 million years after the Big Bang. DIRBE operates in the infrared part of the spectrum, covering a wavelength range of 1 to 300 micrometers in 10 discrete bands. It is an off-axis Gregorian telescope with baffles, stops, and super-polished mirrors, which will minimize response to unwanted "stray" light coming from outside its field-of-view. This design allows DIRBE to achieve the measurement accuracy necessary to distinguish between nearby objects and those at cosmological distances. DIRBE will not focus on a single object, but will instead measure the collective glow of millions of objects. It will measure emission from warm dust in the Solar System and the Milky Way galaxy so precisely that scientists should be able to detect the uniform glow from the first stars and galaxies even if it is only 1 percent as bright as our local celestial environment. - 14 - Analysis of DIRBE data is complicated by the many kinds of known celestial objects as well as by the motion of the Earth within the interplanetary dust cloud. When analysis is complete, a faint and uniform residual signal may remain after all known sources have been understood and subtracted. The small residue would be the long-sought light of first, primordial objects. DELTA/COBE LAUNCH VEHICLE PREPARATIONS The COBE will be launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., aboard a Delta expendable launch vehicle by a 90-member NASA/McDonnell Douglas launch team based at NASA's Kennedy Space Center, Fla. Testing and Modifications The first stage of the Delta arrived Feb. 9 at Cape Canaveral Air Force Station in Florida. There it underwent mission-specific modifications and electrical testing. This stage is a standard Delta 1 booster upgraded with the Castor 4A strap-on solid rocket motors used on the Delta 2 launch vehicle. The Delta booster underwent about a month of testing and checkout of its hydraulic, propulsion and electrical systems. Following the completion of modifications and testing, the booster was shipped to Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. It arrived there on April 1, to await its scheduled erection on the launch pad. The Delta second stage arrived at the Cape on Dec. 15, 1988, and underwent electrical and mechanical modifications to support the COBE mission. This included attachment of a retro package containing two propulsion nozzles to allow the stage to back away from the spacecraft following separation. This second stage modification is necessary since the COBE spacecraft does not require a third stage to achieve its final orbit. The Delta second stage was shipped to California in early May. Before shipment to Vandenberg, the first and second stages were electrically mated for a simulated flight test, an exercise which simulates inflight events. Before shipping the flight vehicle to Vandenberg, a pathfinder vehicle was erected on the launch pad to validate equipment and procedures and also to serve as a "dry run" for pad personnel. Vehicle Assembly After arrival in California and temporary storage, the Delta was erected on Space Launch Complex 2-West. The first stage was raised into position on Aug. 16. The nine Castor 4A strap-on solid rockets, which augment thrust during the boost phase, were fastened to the first stage in sets of three beginning on Aug. 14. The second stage was hoisted atop the Delta first stage on Sept. 29. - 15 - Launch Pad Refurbishment KSC personnel have been involved in extensive refurbishment activities at the West Coast launch site for more than 2 years. SLC-2 West has been inactive since the Landsat 5 launch on March 1, 1984. COBE/Delta Launch Readiness A Simulated Flight, a post lift-off test which exercises the onboard systems active during ascent, occurred on Oct. 11. Final testing of the vehicle for launch includes first-stage tanking with RP-1 fuel, a highly refined kerosene, and the cryogenic liquid oxygen. This occurred on Oct. 27, together with a practice countdown and launch team certification. The COBE satellite was scheduled for mating with the Delta vehicle 2 days later to be followed by vehicle/spacecraft integrated testing. The next significant milestone occurs 3 days before launch with the final loading of the RP-1 propellant. Two days before launch, the second stage will be loaded with storable propellants. The liquid oxygen is loaded during the terminal count beginning at the T-75 minute mark. NASA has been launching the Delta rocket since 1960. Delta/COBE is the final official NASA launch of a NASA-owned Delta vehicle. COBE MISSION MANAGEMENT The Office of Space Science and Applications (OSSA), NASA Headquarters, is responsible for the overall direction and evaluation of the COBE Program. The Director of the Astrophysics Division has the Headquarter responsibility for COBE. The Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) has Project Management responsibility for the design, development, testing, operation and analysis of the data. The Office of Space Operations, NASA Headquarters, has overall tracking and data acquisition responsibility. The Delta launch vehicle project management is the responsibility of GSFC as part of the NASA Expendable Launch Vehicle Program under the Office of Space Flight. The responsible personnel within these areas are: L.A. Fisk, Associate Administrator for Space Science and Applications A.V. Diaz, Deputy Associate Administrator for Space Science and Applications C.J. Pellerin, Jr., Program Director D.A. Gilman, Program Manager L. Caroff, Program Scientist - 16 - W.B. Lenoir, Associate Administrator for Space Flight J.B. Mahon, Deputy Associate Administrator for Space Flight C.R. Gunn, Director, Unmanned Launch Vehicles and Upper Stages P.T. Eaton, Chief, Small and Medium Launch Vehicles Branch C.T. Force, Associate Administrator for Space Operations J.W. Townsend, Jr., Center Director, GSFC J.H. Trainor, Associate Director, GSFC Peter Burr, Director, Flight Projects D.L. Fahnestock, Director of Mission Operations and Data Analysis, GSFC J.R. Busse, Director of Engineering, GSFC R. Mattson, COBE Project Manager, GSFC J.M. Beckham, Delta Project Manager, GSFC J.C. Mather, Project Scientist and Principal Investigator for FIRAS, GSFC N.W. Boggess, Deputy Project Scientist for Data, GSFC D.K. McCarthy, Deputy COBE Project Manager, GSFC J. Peddicord, Deputy Project Manager/Resources, GSFC J.F. Turtil, Systems Engineer, GSFC A.D. Fragomeni, Observatory Manager, GSFC E.W. Young, Instruments Manager, GSFC J.L. Wolfgang, Software Systems Manager, GSFC R.G. Sanford, Mission Operations Manager, GSFC Gen. F. S. McCartney, Center Director, KSC J.T. Conway, Director, Payload Management and Operations J.L. WomackDirector, Expendable Vehicles S.M. Francois, Chief, Launch Operations Division L. J. Holloway, Director, McDonnell Douglas Space Systems, Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. SCIENCE WORKING GROUP Dr. Charles L. Bennett, GSFC, Deputy Principal Investigator for Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) Dr. Nancy W. Boggess, GSFC, Deputy Project Scientist for Data Dr. Edward S. Cheng, GSFC Dr. Eli Dwek, GSFC Dr. Lawrence Caroff, Program Scientist, NASA Headquarters Dr. Samuel Gulkis, Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Dr. Michael G. Hauser, GSFC, Principal Investigator for Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) Dr. Michael A. Janssen, Jet Propulsion Laboratory Dr. Thomas Kelsall, GSFC, Deputy Principal Investigaor for DIRBE Dr. Philip M. Lubin, University of California at Santa Barbara Dr. John C. Mather, GSFC, Project Scientist, Principal Investigator for Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer Dr. Stephan S. Meyer, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Dr. S. Harvey Moseley, Jr., GSFC Dr. Thomas L. Murdock, General Research Corporation Dr. Richard A. Shafer, GSFC Dr. Robert F. Silverberg, GSFC Dr. George F. Smoot, University of California at Berkeley, Principal Investigator for DMR - 17 - Dr. Rainer Weiss, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Chairman of Science Working Group Dr. David T. Wilkinson, Princeton University Dr. Edward L. Wright, University of California, Los Angeles, Data Team Leader CONTRACTORS COMPANY SUBSYSTEM/COMPONENT Ball Aerospace Systems Div. Dewar P.O. Box 1062, Boulder, CO Solarex Solar Arrays 1335 Piccard Drive Rockville, MD 20850 McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co. Batteries P.O. Box 516 Delta Launch Vehicle St. Louis, MO 63166 Launch Support Services Motorola, Inc. Transponder 2501 S. Price Road Chandler, AZ 85248 Ball Aerospace Systems Division Antenna Communications Systems Colorado Engineering Center 10 Longs Peak Drive Broomfield, CO 80020 Gulton Industries, Inc. Command/data handling 6600 Gulton, NE Albuquerque, NM 87109 General Electric Tape recorder Bldg. 10-5-3 Front and Cooper Camden, NJK 18102 Engineering and Economic Research Harness 10289 Aerospace Road Seabrook, MD 20706 Information Development and Instrument electronics Applications, Inc. 10759 Tucker St. Beltsville, MD 20705 Digital Equipment Corp. Instrument ground support 8301 Professional Pl. equipment Landover, MD 20785 - 18 - ST System Corp. Software 4400 Forbes Blvd. Lanham, MD 20706 Barnes Engineering Company Earth scanner assembly 88 Longhill Cross Roads P.O. Box 867 Shelton, CT 06484 Applied Physics Laboratory Momentum management Johns Hopkins Road assembly Laurel, MD 20707 Bendix Field Engineering Company Reaction wheels Teterboro, NJ 07608 ADCOLE Corporation Sun sensors 669 Forest St. Marlkborough, MA 01752 Northrop Precision Products Div. Gyros 100 Morse St., Norwood, MA 02062 Northrop Services, Inc. Integration and test 108 Powers Court, Sterling, VA Swales Mechanical design 5050 Powder Mill Road, Beltsville, MD - end - Ron Baalke | [email protected] Jet Propulsion Lab M/S 301-355 | [email protected] 4800 Oak Grove Dr. | Pasadena, CA 91109 | ------------------------------ | |||||
566.3 | COBE placed in Earth orbit on November 18 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Nov 20 1989 16:52 | 32 |
Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: NASA Headline News for 11/20/89 (Forwarded) Date: 20 Nov 89 19:23:07 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA ----------------------------------------------------------------- Monday, November 20, 1989 Audio: 202/755-1788 ----------------------------------------------------------------- This is NASA Headline News for Monday, November 20: Project officials at Goddard Space Flight Center report that the Cosmic Background Explorer satellite is operating well following its launch into near polar orbit last Saturday. The COBE spacecraft was placed into orbit by a Delta rocket. The Delta rose off the pad ten minutes into the half-hour launch window after high winds aloft finally abated enough to allow the lift-off. COBE was placed into a 559-mile high circular orbit. As COBE scientists prepare for their one-year search for remnants of the Big Bang some 15 billion years ago, astronomers at Palomar Observatory report that they have located a quasar 14 billion light years from Earth, making it the most distant and oldest object yet discovered. ----------------------------------------------------------------- These reports are filed daily, Monday through Friday, at 12 noon, Eastern time. ----------------------------------------------------------------- A service of the Internal Communications Branch (LPC), NASA Headquarters, Washington, D.C. | |||||
566.4 | COBE Status - November 21 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Tue Nov 21 1989 17:04 | 36 |
Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: COBE Status for 11/21/89 (Forwarded) Date: 21 Nov 89 17:25:44 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA Cosmic Background Explorer Status Report November 21, 1989 Four days after liftoff from the Vandenberg Air Force Base, the Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) continues to perform flawlessly. Today at 6:19 a.m. EST, a critical milestone was passed as the cover was ejected from the Dewar. This giant "thermos bottle" houses two of COBE's three instruments: the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE) and the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS). The liquid helium in the Dewar keeps the instruments below 2 degrees Kelvin--cool enough to detect remnant light from the Big Bang and from the first stars and galaxies. This remnant light has been shifted by the expansion of the Universe from ultraviolet and visible into the infrared and submillimeter waves (called "red shift"), which will be detected by these instruments. DIRBE began operating at 11 a.m. EST today. Tomorrow at 6 a.m. EST, FIRAS' Mirror Transport Mechanism, will be unlatched allowing the last instrument to begin operating. The Differential Microwave Radiometer, which will look for differences in brightness among parts of the sky, began mapping the sky on Sunday, November 19. The maps indicate that the instrument is performing well. | |||||
566.5 | COBE Update - December 1 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Dec 04 1989 11:04 | 24 |
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro Subject: COBE Update 12/1/89 (Forwarded) Date: 2 Dec 89 01:21:33 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Ron Baalke) Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA. COBE UPDATE DECEMBER 1, 1989 Goddard's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) continues to function normally from its orbit 559 miles from Earth and is in the final phases of instrument check-out. The COBE may be viewed by the unaided eye, atmospheric conditions permitting, at approximately 5:35 p.m. each afternoon as it approaches from the south. In the meantime, the COBE continues to downlink data twice a day to Wallops Flight Facility for relay to the COBE science data room at Goddard. The Goddard-managed spacecraft was launched on November 18 from Vandenberg Air Force Base, California. Ron Baalke | [email protected] Jet Propulsion Lab M/S 301-355 | [email protected] 4800 Oak Grove Dr. | Pasadena, CA 91109 | | |||||
566.6 | COBE in January issue of SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Tue Jan 02 1990 08:55 | 6 |
There is an in-depth article on the COBE satellite in the January 1990 issue of SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, written by several of the project designers. Larry | |||||
566.7 | COBE Update - January 12 | RENOIR::KLAES | N = R*fgfpneflfifaL | Mon Jan 15 1990 10:56 | 115 |
Newsgroups: sci.space,sci.astro Subject: COBE Update - 01/12/90 (Forwarded) Date: 13 Jan 90 00:56:08 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Ron Baalke) Organization: Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, CA. EARLY COBE RESULTS IN ACCORD WITH BIG BANG THEORY A major advance in cosmology was revealed today as early results from NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE), launched last fall, were presented at the American Astronomical Society meetings held at Crystal City, Va. Preliminary results are in accord with the predictions of the Big Bang theory, which traces the origin of the universe to a primordial explosion some 15 billion years ago. The universe today shows that sometime after the Big Bang additional release(s) of energy must have occurred. COBE's new results severely limit the magnitude and character of such a release. Limited COBE data now indicate a smooth, uniform Big Bang. However, small deviations from a blackbody spectrum -- the characteristic signature of radiation from an opaque object of uniform temperature -- would reveal energetic processes in the early universe. COBE scientists reported that the instruments onboard the spacecraft are performing exquisitely with precision never before achieved. Such precision puts new constraints on theories to explain the present universe. Over the 2-year mission, COBE will continue to collect much more data. Scientists expect the final data to be ten times more sensitive than these early results. These early results were reported to the American Astronomical Society by the principal investigators for the three instruments: the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS), the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) and the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE). Dr. John Mather, Principal Investigator for FIRAS and Project Scientist, reported that the spectrum measurement of the cosmic microwave background (a relic of the Big Bang) is highly accurate and heralds a major advance in observational cosmology. Based on a small sample of data, FIRAS measurements show no deviation from a blackbody spectrum as large as one percent of the peak brightness of the cosmic microwave background over the wavelength range 500 microns to 5 millimeters. When FIRAS captured these data, it was pointed toward the North Galactic Pole, where emissions from our own galaxy, the Milky Way, are expected to be low. Using only 9 minutes of sky observations, FIRAS already has produced the most precise cosmic microwave background spectrum measurement ever made. Much more exposure time will be obtained during the mission. Dr. George Smoot, Principal Investigator for the DMR, presented the first COBE maps of the variation in brightness of the cosmic background radiation over the sky. The maps, taken at frequencies of 31, 53 and 90 GHz, indicate that the cosmic background radiation is equally bright in all directions. The question of what and where are the progenitors of galaxies and large clusters of galaxies is still open. The preliminary results from DMR are based on only about 20 days of data and also indicate the extraordinary smoothness of the universe. This instrument will continue to take data for two years, which will improve its sensitivity to search for anisotropies, or "lumpiness," in the early universe well beyond the present limits. Dr. Michael Hauser, Principal Investigator for DIRBE, showed maps of half the sky taken at wavelengths of 1.2, 12, and 240 microns (never before achieved for the 1.2 and 240 micron wavelengths). Final maps from this experiment will enable COBE scientists to search for radiation from the first stars and galaxies. These initial maps, taken over a one-week period, clearly reveal bright foreground radiation from stars, dust in our own Solar System, and interstellar dust. DIRBE maps half the entire sky every day at 10 different wavelengths and it covers the entire sky in 6 months. At the AAS meeting, Dr. Nancy W. Boggess, Deputy Project Scientist, gave an overview of the mission, reporting that COBE has met or exceeded all design goals. At launch, all systems deployed as planned. The RF/Thermal Shield, which protects all three instruments from solar and terrestrial radiation, is more spectacular than hoped. This efficient shield results in a lower than anticipated temperature of the dewar, the giant thermos bottle that maintains the FIRAS and DIRBE at operating temperatures below 2 degrees K. The dewar now operates at 1.4 degrees K, though designed for 1.6 degrees K less. The lower temperature will enable the detectors of the COBE instruments to be more sensitive. It also makes the lifetime of the liquid helium, which keeps the dewar cryogenically cooled, longer than the original 12 to 14 months. It is now expected to last 430 days. COBE was launched Nov. 18, 1989, aboard the last NASA-owned Delta rocket, from the Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. COBE is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., for the Office of Space Science and Applications. GSFC is responsible for the design, development and flight operations, as well as for the development of the analysis software and for the production of the final mission data sets. Ron Baalke | [email protected] Jet Propulsion Lab M/S 301-355 | [email protected] 4800 Oak Grove Dr. | Pasadena, CA 91109 | | |||||
566.8 | COBE Update - April 18 | 26523::KLAES | The Universe, or nothing! | Wed Apr 18 1990 15:52 | 62 |
Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: NASA Headline News for 04/18/90 (Forwarded) Date: 18 Apr 90 17:31:52 GMT Reply-To: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA ----------------------------------------------------------------- Wednesday, April 18, 1990 Audio Service: 202/755-1788 ----------------------------------------------------------------- This is NASA Headline News for Wednesday, April 18: Scientists are puzzled with some data from the Cosmic Background Explorer Satellite launched last November, but also pleased with a visual byproduct. Wire service reports say scientists meeting in Washington, D.C., are confounded by data which indicate an unexpectedly smooth and uniform expansion of the Universe and no indication of other cataclysmic events that had been theorized. Michael Hauser, of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center says, "The quandry is deepening". A color image of the galactic center of the Milky Way was released yesterday free of cosmic dust that has obscured our galaxy's center previously. _________________________________________________________________ Here's the broadcast schedule for Public Affairs events on NASA Select TV. All times are EDT. Thursday, April 19: 11:30 a.m. NASA Update will be transmitted. Friday, April 20: 10:30 a.m. STS-35 astronaut news conference from Johnson Space Center. Sunday, April 22: 1:00 p.m. STS-31 crew arrival at KSC Tuesday, April 24..(Subject to change) 9:00 a.m. STS-31 Countdown Status Report 10:00 a.m. APU/telescope Status Report 11:00 a.m. Prelaunch News Conference Wednesday, April 25..(Subject to change) 4:00 a.m. STS-31 mission launch coverage begins. NOTE: During the STS-31 mission television highlights will be transmitted on Satcom F1R, transponder #13 at 12 midnight, EDT, for the benefits of TV stations and educational institutions in Alaska and Hawaii. All events and times are subject to change without notice. ----------------------------------------------------------------- These reports are filed daily, Monday through Friday, at 12 noon, EDT. ----------------------------------------------------------------- A service of the Internal Communications Branch, NASA Hq. | |||||
566.9 | Helium depletion changes COBE mission | ADVAX::KLAES | All the Universe, or nothing! | Mon Sep 24 1990 13:13 | 96 |
Date: 21 Sep 90 22:19:43 GMT From: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Subject: COBE enters new phase of operations after helium depletion (Forwarded) Michael Braukus Headquarters, Washington, D.C. September 21, 1990 (Phone: 202/453-1549) Randee Exler Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. (Phone: 301/286-7277) RELEASE: 90-129 COBE ENTERS NEW PHASE OF OPERATIONS AFTER HELIUM DEPLETION With the depletion of its liquid helium supply this morning, NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) is beginning a new phase of operations, extending its search for structure in the early Universe. The liquid helium was housed inside a dewar, a vacuum insulated "thermos", that provided a stable, low temperature environment for two instruments -- the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) and the Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE). The dewar contained 600 liters of liquid helium. Launched last November 18 into a polar orbit approximately 555 statute miles high, COBE was designed specifically to measure the remnant of the Big Bang, the primeval explosion that started the expanding Universe. It completed one full-sky survey in mid-June and continued with a second survey before helium depletion. Both FIRAS and DIRBE require cooling to less than 2 degrees Kelvin (K) (two degrees above absolute zero), for full sensitivity. On the Kelvin scale, average room temperature is 300 degrees K. During the next few months, the inside of the dewar which held the cryogen, is expected to rise to approximately 80 degrees K. The near infrared bands in the DIRBE will continue to function at these higher temperatures. Another instrument, the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR), consists of six separate receivers at three different frequencies located outside the dewar. The DMR does not require cryogenic cooling and will continue re-mapping the sky to further increase the sensitivity of its measurements. Of the three instruments, only the FIRAS will no longer take data, since it requires a very low operating temperature. FIRAS, as well as the other instruments, has observed each part of the sky multiple times during the course of the year. The FIRAS already has produced the most sensitive, accurate measurements of the spectrum ever achieved, according to project officials. Even at this early stage of data processing, the COBE data have made enormous contributions to the field of observational cosmology. The first peer-reviewed article on the spectrum results was called by referees "one of the most important cosmological experiments of this century." Just eight weeks after launch, preliminary results were presented that revealed the first definitive spectrum of the cosmic background radiation. The spectrum showed that the Big Bang theory was confirmed with textbook perfect agreement with predictions, but further analysis may well reveal small and very important differences. DMR maps confirmed that the Universe was extremely homogeneous (or smooth) at this early stage, also in accordance with the Big Bang theory. DIRBE maps have provided unprecedented new views of our local cosmic environment, the solar system and the Milky Way Galaxy. These maps could provide the first definitive search for the elusive cosmic infrared background to reveal the glow from the first generation of objects in the Universe. The complex COBE satellite represents a major advancement in scientific technology, and carries the first cryogenic scientific instruments with moving parts to fly in a satellite. This also is the first time that cryogenic instruments carried their own absolute calibrators. All systems met or exceeded their design specifications. The COBE mission now has a great quantity of data that must undergo extensive processing. The "quick-look" data show that the data are of very high quality, and indicate that COBE's instruments have good sensitivity, stability and linearity. The challenge ahead is to reduce and analyze the data carefully to understand the conditions in the early Universe. Calibration and interpretation of signals from nearby regions that confuse our view of the Big Bang must be examined and understood. The great mystery still remains: How did the Universe split itself into the great objects that exist today, including galaxies, clusters of galaxies and huge empty areas between them? The COBE data are expected to hold the basic evidence of this process when the analysis is complete. The Goddard Space Flight Center is responsible for the COBE development, operation, and data processing. | |||||
566.10 | COBE maps interstellar material in Milky Way galaxy | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Mon Jan 14 1991 19:32 | 104 |
From: [email protected] (Peter E. Yee) Date: 14 Jan 91 20:31:01 GMT Organization: NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, CA Paula Cleggett-Haleim Headquarters, Washington, D.C. January 14, 1991 (Phone: 202/453-1549) Noon Randee Exler Goddard Space Flight Center, Md. (Phone: 301/286-7277) RELEASE: 91-6 COBE MAPS INTERSTELLAR MATERIAL IN MILKY WAY GALAXY For the first time, astronomers have mapped the distribution of nitrogen throughout our galaxy. The new observations were taken by an instrument on NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer, the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer. This all-sky survey, along with additional maps of carbon and dust, provides quantitative information that may enable scientists to understand better the heating and cooling processes that take place throughout the Milky Way. These accomplishments were reported today at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Philadelphia by members of the COBE science team. COBE scientists presented images that show the locations in the galaxy of ionized nitrogen. The nitrogen map of the Milky Way is at the wavelength of 205 micrometers and is the first detection of this important spectral line. The carbon map was produced at 158 micrometers and the dust map at 205 micrometer wavelengths. "Before COBE, it was not possible to map the whole galaxy in this way, although these atomic emissions are the dominant way in which the interstellar gas cools," said COBE Project Scientist Dr. John C. Mather, who added that COBE's unique capabilities permit these all-sky measurements unencumbered by atmospheric and instrument emission. Five months of data were used to produce the maps. The emission from ionized nitrogen atoms was found to occur at a precise wavelength of 205.3 micrometers. The exact determination of this wavelength, which had never been measured before, is important because it will enable astronomers to build future instruments to map this radiation with greater spatial resolution. The COBE data also were used to measure the total energy emitted by the dust, neutral carbon atoms and carbon monoxide molecules in the interstellar gas, showing that our galaxy is a typical spiral galaxy. These new data show that carbon and nitrogen atoms -- some of the key building blocks of life -- are extremely widespread in the thin gas that fills the space between the stars. These atoms are created inside stars by nuclear reactions and then released back into space by stellar winds or explosions at the ends of stellar lives. The data also confirm theories that the mixture of gas and dust in our galaxy is heated by starlight striking dust grains and cooled by the carbon and nitrogen emissions. The greatest concentrations of the atoms and dust grains are in the plane of the galaxy. The data were taken using the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS), one of the three instruments aboard COBE, NASA's first satellite primarily designed for cosmological studies. COBE, launched from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., Nov. 18, 1989, primarily studies the diffuse microwave and infrared light coming from the "big bang" at the beginning of the currently observable universe and from the first objects that formed after this primordial explosion. FIRAS is the same instrument that 1 year ago enabled COBE scientists to report the most precise measurements ever obtained of the spectrum of the cosmic microwave background radiation. The new results show that this instrument also is remarkably sensitive to emissions of dust grains, atoms and molecules in the galaxy. The report was made by Drs. John C. Mather, Richard A. Shafer and Charles L. Bennett of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., and Dr. Edward L. Wright, of the University of California. The data were analyzed at the Goddard Space Flight Center. The scientific team includes members at Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Mass.; General Research Corp., Danvers, Mass.; Princeton University, N.J.; University of California at Los Angeles, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif., as well as the Goddard Space Flight Center. Scientists at General Sciences Corp., Laurel, Md., Applied Research Corp., Landover, Md.; Universities Space Research Association, Greenbelt, Md., and Systems Technologies Corp., Lanham, Md., support the reduction and analysis of the data. This research is supported by NASA's Astrophysics Division of the Office of Space Science and Applications. | |||||
566.11 | COBE Detects Structure of Early Universe | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Thu Apr 23 1992 13:12 | 112 |
Paula Cleggett-Haleim Headquarters, Washington, D.C. April 23, 1992 Randee Exler Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. RELEASE: 92-51 Scientists announced today, at the American Physical Society's meeting held in Washington, D.C., that they have detected the long-sought variations within the glow from the Big Bang -- the primeval explosion that began the Universe 15 billion years ago -- using NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE). This detection is a major milestone in a 25-year search and supports theories explaining how the initial expansion happened. These variations show up as temperature fluctuations in the sky, revealed by statistical analysis of maps made by the Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR) on the COBE satellite. The fluctuations are extremely faint, only about thirty millionths of a degree warmer or cooler than the rest of the sky, which is itself very cold -- only 2.73 degrees above absolute zero. The DMR is still gathering data and the measurements are expected to become even more precise. The Big Bang theory was initially suggested because it explains why distant galaxies are receding from us at enormous speeds, as though all galaxies started moving away from the same location a long time ago. The theory also predicts the existence of cosmic background radiation -- the glow left over from the explosion itself. The Big Bang theory received its strongest confirmation when this radiation was discovered in 1964 by Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson, who later won the Nobel Prize for this discovery. Although the Big Bang theory is widely accepted, there have been several unresolved mysteries. How could all of the matter and energy in the Universe become so evenly mixed in the instant following the Big Bang? How could this evenly distributed matter then break up spontaneously into objects of all sizes, such as galaxies and clusters of galaxies? The temperature variations seen by COBE help to resolve these mysteries. "The COBE receivers mapped the sky as it would appear if our eyes could see microwaves at the wavelengths 3.3, 5.7 and 9.6 mm, which is about 10,000 times longer than the wavelength of ordinary light," explained Dr. George Smoot, University of California, Berkeley, the leader of the team that made this discovery. "Most of the energy received from the sky at these wavelengths is from the cosmic background radiation of the Big Bang, but it is extremely faint by human standards. "Hundreds of millions of measurements were made by the DMR over the course of a year, and then combined to make pictures of the sky. Making sure all the measurements were combined correctly required exquisitely careful computer analysis," Smoot explained. Another COBE scientist, Dr. Charles Bennett of the Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., explained that a major challenge for the team was to distinguish the Big Bang signals from those coming from our own Milky Way Galaxy. "The Milky Way emits microwaves that appear mostly concentrated in a narrow zone around the sky. We compared the signals at different positions and at different wavelengths to separate the radiation of the Big Bang from that of the Milky Way Galaxy," said Dr. Bennett. The temperatures and sizes of the fluctuations in the background radiation COBE detected agree with the predictions of "inflationary cosmology," a theory that says the structure and behavior of the Universe were determined by minute fluctuations occurring when the Universe was much younger than one-trillionth of a second. The COBE results provide new evidence in support of the "inflationary" scenario. The amount of gravity provided by these visible fluctuations was inadequate to draw together the galaxies and clusters of galaxies. Instead, astronomers conclude that the galaxies formed only because most of the material in the Universe is invisible and totally unlike ordinary matter. This "dark matter" provides the necessary gravitational attraction for forming galaxies. The fluctuations seen by COBE are too small to explain how the visible matter in the young Universe could condense into the galaxies that now exist. According to COBE scientist Dr. Edward Wright from the University of California, Los Angeles, the COBE measurements support theories postulating large amounts of dark matter. "These theories say that most of the matter in the Universe is invisible to us and must be a new kind of matter, not yet detected in our laboratories," he explained. "Nevertheless, we need such invisible matter to explain how galaxies formed in the early Universe and gathered themselves together into huge clusters. Ordinary matter would be attracted into regions of concentrated dark matter, and the Universe as we know it today could develop, eventually leading to the formation of galaxies, stars and planets," Wright said. COBE was launched in November, 1989, from Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., aboard a Goddard-managed Delta launch vehicle. The Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md., manages COBE for NASA's Office of Space Science and Applications, Astrophysics Division, Washington, D.C. | |||||
566.12 | COBE Status - 8/31/92 | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Wed Sep 02 1992 14:58 | 16 |
COSMIC BACKGROUND EXPLORER (COBE): COBE continues to acquire data from the Differential Microwave Radiometer (DMR) and Difuse Infrared Background Experiment without any problems. The project scientists continue analyzing data from all three COBE instruments including the Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS). In April, COBE scientists announced that DMR data show that the cosmic explosion that began the expanding Universe 15 billion years ago was not perfectly smooth and uniform. Regions with different temperatures, densitites and sizes were produced. The spacecraft was rolled back to its normal four-degree Sun angle this month. This is the last maneuver needed to reconfigure the spacecraft after its three-month eclipse season (May - July). The maneuver was not performed sooner to protect the spacecraft from sunlight reflecting off of both the atmosphere and ice over the South Pole. COBE, built and managed by Goddard, launched November 18, 1989 on a Delta II rocket. | |||||
566.13 | Big Bang Theory passes toughest test | PRAGMA::GRIFFIN | Dave Griffin | Fri Jan 08 1993 20:46 | 77 |
Paula Cleggett-Haleim Headquarters, Washington, D.C. January 7, 1993 Randee Exler Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. RELEASE: 93-5 The Big Bang Theory passed its toughest test yet with the latest results reported from NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) team at the American Astronomical Society meeting in Phoenix, Ariz., today. Precise measurements made by COBE's FIRAS of the afterglow from the Big Bang -- the primeval explosion that began the universe approximately 15 billion years ago -- show that 99.97 percent of the early radiant energy of the universe was released within the first year after the Big Bang itself. "Radiant energy" is energy emitted in any form of light, from x-rays and gamma rays to visible and infrared light or even radio waves. COBE's Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS) was designed to receive the microwave and infrared energy from the Big Bang. "The Big Bang theory comes out a winner," said COBE Project Scientist and FIRAS Principal Investigator Dr. John C. Mather of NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. "This is the ultimate in tracing one's cosmic roots," Mather said. All theories that attempt to explain the origin of large scale structure seen in the universe today now must conform to the constraints imposed by these latest measurements. This includes theories that postulate large amounts of energy released by such things as black holes, exploding supermassive stars or the decay of unstable elementary particles. In other words, there were not a lot of "little bangs," as suggested by some theories. The Big Bang Theory predicts that the spectrum of relic radiation should be that of a perfect "black body" unless there were major energy releases more than a year after the explosion. (A black body is a hypothetical cosmic body that absorbs all radiation falling on it, but reflects none what-so-ever. A black body emits at the same temperature at every wavelength.) These latest FIRAS results reveal that later energy releases did not occur. The COBE scientists now can say that the temperature of the afterglow radiation is 2.726 degrees above absolute zero (273 degrees below zero on the Celsius scale) with an uncertainty of only 0.01 degrees. Today's announcement is the result of analyzing data from the FIRAS during its 10 months of observations. Hundreds of millions of measurements were combined to obtain these unprecedentedly pre "Making certain that all of the measurements were combined correctly required exquisitely careful work and lengthy analysis by a large team of COBE scientists," Mather reported. "We are seeing the cold glow still remaining from the initially very hot Big Bang. These results now limit the size of any 'after shocks' following the Big Bang. The closer we examine the Big Bang the simpler the picture gets," said Mather. "It took us 18 years of careful effort to reach this point, but now we can say that the Big Bang Theory has been tested against observations to a fine degree of precision," explained Mather. "Experimental evidence of the Big Bang was first found by Edwin Hubble in the 1920's. He found that distant galaxies in ever direction are going away from us with speeds proportional to their distance. Therefore, gallaxies that are farther away are going faster. This is exactly the pattern that would occur if the entire universe originated in a single explosion, now called the Big Bang. Papers on these results and their implications soon will be submitted to the Astrophysical Journal for publication. COBE, launched Nov. 18, 1989, is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, for NASA's Office of Space Science and Applications, Astrophysics Division, Washington, D.C. Source:NASA Spacelink Modem:205-895-0028 Internet:192.149.89.61 | |||||
566.14 | Why did COBE break apart? | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Tue Oct 19 1993 17:26 | 28 |
Article: 75056 Newsgroups: sci.space From: [email protected] (Urban Fredriksson) Subject: News from Flight International Sender: [email protected] (Root System) Organization: None. I speak only for myself. Date: Tue, 12 Oct 1993 18:26:38 GMT When commander Tsiblyev's space suit overheated on Sept 28th, his and Serebrov's space walk was cut short at 1h 52m. Their main task was to film the exterior of Mir to check for possible damage from the Perseid meteor shower. The next Indian PSLV (polar satellite launch vehicle) launch will be delayed at least two year. The first launch failed when at the second stage's separation the booster's pitch attitude was altered, leaving it 75 km lower at third stage cut-off, making it impossible to reach orbital velocity with the fourth stage. Otherwise "it worked perfectly", including the new liquid- propellant Vikas second stage and the 129 ton solid propellant first stage with flexed nozzle (two of these will be used as strap on booster for the GSLV (geo-stationary launch vehicle). The COBE (COsmic Background Explorer) satellite is pieces of debris. So far, 30 small objects have been tracked. -- Urban Fredriksson [email protected] | |||||
566.15 | RE 566.14 | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Thu Oct 28 1993 12:34 | 44 |
Article: 75154 From: [email protected] (David Ward) Newsgroups: sci.space Subject: Re: News from Flight International Date: 13 Oct 1993 12:52 EST Organization: Goddard Space Flight Center - Robotics Lab In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (John Fleming) writes... >In article <urf.750450398@sw2001>, [email protected] (Urban Fredriksson) wrote: >> >> [ stuff deleted ] >> >> The COBE (cosmic background explorer) satellite is pieces of > ^^^^^^^^^ >> debris. So far, 30 small objects have been tracked. > ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ > >EEK!! What is this!!!??? Did I just miss something? Is COBE ok? >Did it blow up? :-( > >Or is it just paint flakes and atomic oxygen erosion of thermal >blankets and frozen blobs of leaking coolant? Not that anyone could say >for sure, but I'd hate to see another publicly-visible satellite >faux pas. >-- >John A. Fleming, Motorola Satellite Communications, >[email protected] >"In the difficult years that lie ahead, we must remember that the snows of >Olympus lie silently beneath the stars, waiting for our grandchildren." > - Arthur Clarke Relax--COBE's still in one operational piece, although not for long. Science operations are scheduled to end on COBE this winter (not exactly sure of the date). I think the small objects are simply debris/ contamination that may have come off the spacecraft. Someone has speculated that the objects may be thermal blankets that have come loose, but I haven't heard of any detrimental effects that have been seen on the spacecraft. David W. @ GSFC | |||||
566.16 | COBE ends its science mission | VERGA::KLAES | Quo vadimus? | Wed Dec 29 1993 15:57 | 90 |
Date: Mon, 27 Dec 1993 16:52:29 +0500 (EST) From: A Close Encounter of the Learning Kind <[email protected]> Subject: NASA ENDS COSMIC BACKGROUND EXPLORER SCIENCE OPERATIONS 12/23/93: NASA ENDS COSMIC BACKGROUND EXPLORER SCIENCE OPERATIONS Donald L. Savage Headquarters, Washington, D.C. December 23, 1993 Michael Finneran Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. RELEASE: 93-228 The final operational instrument on NASA's first spacecraft to explore the origins of the Universe will be turned off today after completing 4 years of landmark research, including confirmation of the Big Bang theory that says the Universe was created in a single momentous explosion. The Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE) spacecraft, built and managed by the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC), Greenbelt, Md., will be used as an engineering training and test satellite by NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, Wallops Island, Va. beginning in January after Goddard spacecraft controllers conclude engineering operations. "COBE has more than achieved its technical goals," said Dr. John Mather, Project Scientist at GSFC. "It has observed the Universe as it was at its birth. It's done everything we asked it to do, and it's a proud day for us to declare our flight operations complete." Launched on Nov. 9, 1989, on a Delta rocket, COBE's primary science mission requirement called for one year of observations. Near the end of its first year the liquid helium coolant needed by two of the three instruments was exhausted, leaving one instrument and some channels of a second instrument operational. COBE was the first space mission to address basic questions of modern cosmology, such as how the Universe began, how it evolved to its present state and what forces govern this evolution. According to the Big Bang theory, the Universe was created about 15 billion years ago in a violent cosmic explosion that hurled primeval matter in all directions. COBE became well known for its very precise measurements confirming the Big Bang theory and for its detection of the largest and oldest objects ever discovered. Scientists styudying the mysterious conditions present in the early Universe and how it evolved into stars and galaxies used precise measurements from three COBE instruments: * The Far Infrared Absolute Spectrophotometer (FIRAS), designed to measure the spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background to great accuracy. * The Differential Microwave Radiometers (DMR), designed to measure the "lumpiness," or anisotropies, in the Universe that existed just 300,000 years after the Big Bang. * The Diffuse Infrared Background Experiment (DIRBE), designed to search for the glow from the first stars and galaxies in the Universe. The FIRAS instrument measured the spectrum of the Cosmic Microwave Background radiation with unprecedented accuracy, showing that it is the same as the spectrum predicted by the Big Bang theory. Since the COBE measurements show no deviations from the spectrum predicted by the Big Bang, it is known now that 99.97 percent of the energy of the Universe was released within the first year after the Big Bang itself. The FIRAS also showed that the temperature of the afterglow of the radiation from the Big Bang some 15 billion years ago has cooled to 2.726 degrees above absolute zero, with an uncertainty of only 0.01 degrees. At the moment of the Big Bang, the temperature of the Universe was trillions upon trillions of degrees. The DMR instrument detected the primordial hot and cold spots in the Big Bang radiation. The cold spots show denser matter that could condense into huge clouds of galaxies. Hot spots were thinner regions that eventually contained no galaxies. Scientists hailed these findings because this first detection of primordial seeds will form the basis of scientist's understanding of how matter was able to form into galaxies, clusters of galaxies and superclusters of galaxies and huge empty spaces devoid of galaxies. The hot and cold spots found by COBE are only 30-millionths of a degree -- one part in 100,000 -- warmer or colder than the regions next to them. The COBE results show that these seeds are truly primordial and were present just 300,000 years after the Big Bang. |