Brilliant Space Photos From Chandra and Spitzer
Two unsung space telescopes create eye-opening images of the universe from light we can't see
- By Abigail Tucker
- Smithsonian magazine, February 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The telescope’s most amazing power may be its ability to view the universe in its infancy. Looking deep in space is the same as looking back in time, explains Fazio, who designed part of Spitzer. As the 13.7-billion-year-old universe expands, visible light is stretched into infrared wavelengths, a phenomenon known as redshift. Focusing on infrared light, Spitzer scientists initially hoped to see the universe when it was just two billion years old—but they’ve gone much farther back in time than that. “Now we’ve been able to look back to 700 million years old,” Fazio said, or about 13 billion years ago. Spitzer’s observations suggest that galaxies had already begun to form when the universe was only 400 million to 500 million years old, much earlier than previously theorized.
Chandra, the X-ray telescope, follows an elliptical orbit around Earth, flying 200 times higher than Hubble. Chandra specializes in violent phenomena, such as flares shooting from young stars and the explosions of supernovas. “What we like to know is what was going on inside the star just before it blew up, what are the details of the explosion itself, and what happens following the explosion,” says Harvey Tananbaum, director of the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory’s Chandra X-ray Center.
Chandra also probes objects with extreme gravitational or magnetic fields, like neutron stars and black holes. Some scientists expect Chandra to be crucial in the study of little-understood dark matter and dark energy, mysterious forces that account for most of the material in the universe. But the telescope has also revealed new things about more familiar sights: Saturn’s rings, it turns out, glitter with X-rays.
Sometimes astronomers produce images using data from all three telescopes. In 2009, the trio generated a stunning composite view of the Milky Way’s core. Hubble showed countless stars, Spitzer captured radiant dust clouds and Chandra tracked X-ray emissions from material near a black hole.
Telescopes can’t last forever. Spitzer ran out of coolant last year, though some parts are still cold enough to function, and the telescope has begun to drift away from Earth. “It’s going to be sad to see it go,” says Fazio. “It’s been a major part of my life for the past 25 years. But we’re still mining the data and finding new stuff.” In 2015, the Webb, a new infrared telescope with the capacity to collect more than 58 times as much light as Spitzer, is scheduled to pick up where Spitzer leaves off.
Chandra is still functioning well, and scientists expect the instrument to soldier on for at least another decade. Eventually, perhaps a century from now, the worn-out telescope will likely slip too close to Earth and burn up in the atmosphere. But we have many more illuminating images to look forward to before then.
Abigail Tucker is Smithsonian’s staff writer.
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Comments (12)
I love how it looks up in space ad takes pics of exploding stars and black holes
Posted by taylor on February 11,2012 | 03:11 PM
Now how can anybody say that there is no existence of aliens(another living planet),after seeing this i m quit confident aliens are there. Its a fabulous achievement.
Posted by Vishwanandan on February 23,2011 | 12:23 AM
Re: Seeing the Invisible Universe – by Abigail Tucker Feb 2011 Smithsonian The beautiful pictures from Chandra brought back many memories for me. I was the second and third shift Senior Test Conductor at TRW responsible for the Assembly, Integration and Environmental testing of AXAF – later renamed Chandra. Our dedicated test crew worked tirelessly 24/7 for over two years to make Chandra launch ready. The challenges were enormous and it took imagination and innovative problem solving skills to keep the project on time and on track. It was like losing a member of our TRW family when we shipped Chandra to Florida for the Columbia Space Shuttle Launch.
Posted by Robert Smith on February 16,2011 | 04:18 PM
The article was good but on the web, it's criminal to offer such tiny photo's of a subject like the universe!
Here's a better example of how photo's of the universe should be shown: http://apod.nasa.gov/apod/ap110212.html
Posted by Joseph on February 12,2011 | 02:54 AM
Help! Thinking I was blocking the ad images, I blocked instead the beautiful galactic images and can't seem to undo my mistake. How can I reverse my decision? I'd love to use these in my classroom.
Posted by Julie O on January 26,2011 | 02:47 PM
Spectacular images shown by powerful telescopes are really awesome...I wish God has created a planet somewhere in the galaxy habitable to another set of living things that do not abuse God's creation.
Posted by Oscar S. Ferrer on January 25,2011 | 03:45 AM
Hi BobE,
good question. When matter falls into a black hole it gets accelerated due to the strong gravitational force but if the black hole is close to a good supply of gas, it can't all get in at once and a traffic jam occurs. As all the gas pushes to get to the centre and as the gas particles rub together against each other, the gas gets very hot and turns into a plasma. Things become chaotic and the rapid rotation of the black hole swirls space-time around like water going down a plug hole, creating magnetic fields in the plasma. These magnetic fields result in some of the plasma being ejected from the traffic jam region close to the black hole. SO some of the stuff witing to get in gets thrown out. Once its inside, its gone and you can't see it (unless black holes evaporate but thats a different story.). You are seeing violent events in the stuff that is falling in.
Posted by Malc on January 24,2011 | 07:29 PM
Gotta LOVE intelligent design!
Posted by Sandy on January 24,2011 | 06:41 PM
And Some Say There Is No God !!!, I am apt to believe completely otherwise! This massive and beauty filled mysterious objects, could not of just happened without divine intervention. Thats like saying a new BMW could create itself from the scraps at the local junk yard, without any help what so ever ! Highly unlikely !!!
Posted by Mark King on January 23,2011 | 09:55 PM
One of the Chandra pictures depicts matter being ejected from a black hole. I have always read that nothing escapes a black hole. Have I been mislead?
Posted by BobE on January 23,2011 | 07:45 PM
Great job! I love the clarity in the filaments of color. Cas A is especially spectacular as you can see the remnant white dwarf star in the center of the supernova explosion. The Crab Nebula is also spectacular, for similar reasons.
It is important to see images like these: they help us to situate ourselves in the universe. We have been able to see these kinds of photos only in the last 20 years. I, for one, am utterly grateful to/for the astronomers and telescopes that have made these images possible. Let's see more of these knockout images!
Posted by Q R Quasar on January 23,2011 | 05:35 AM
Great Pictures, Love the Color
Posted by Lorraine on January 20,2011 | 11:07 AM