1 / 22

Exploring the Hot Universe with the Coolest Instrument in Orbit

Exploring the Hot Universe with the Coolest Instrument in Orbit. Presented by Dr. James Lochner (USRA & NASA/GSFC) Sara Mitchell (SP Systems & NASA/GSFC). Matter around black holes is heated to millions of degrees and emits x-rays. Hot gas between galaxies gives evidence for dark matter.

cmatthew
Download Presentation

Exploring the Hot Universe with the Coolest Instrument in Orbit

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Exploring the Hot Universe with the Coolest Instrument in Orbit Presented by Dr. James Lochner (USRA & NASA/GSFC) Sara Mitchell (SP Systems & NASA/GSFC)

  2. Matter around black holes is heated to millions of degrees and emits x-rays. Hot gas between galaxies gives evidence for dark matter. Massive stars explode in violent supernova explosions. The Hot Universe The Universe is filled with highly energetic phenomena

  3. Meet Suzaku! Suzaku is a brand-new satellite that will explore how stars and galaxies form and evolve. Using X-ray telescopes, it will explore phenomena occurring in extreme environments in the universe. We’ll discuss: • Science and instruments on Suzaku • Bringing Suzaku into your classroom

  4. Just the facts… WHO? Suzaku (known pre-launch as Astro-E2) WHEN? Launched July 10, 2005 WHERE? Built simultaneously in the US and Japan, and launched from Uchinoura, Japan. WHY? To detect X-rays from sources in space, such as black holes, galaxies, and stars. HOW? Well, let’s take a look…

  5. Where do we get our X-rays? Kim Weaver

  6. Pre-Collimator Primary Secondary So you want to see X-rays… Build a Telescope! • X-rays do not reflect off of normal mirrors. • But they do reflect at grazing incidences off metal mirrors. • Two grazing incidences will bring x-rays into focus.

  7. More on Grazing Incidences Reflecting X-rays is a bit like skimming stones on a lake -- using the best angle will make them bounce (reflect), instead of sink (absorb). Simple classroom activities about grazing incidences can be kinesthetic or modeled with balls, eggs, and other materials.

  8. Four quadrants (1344 mirrors) are assembled to form a cylindrical stage 40cm in diameter. Reflectors are aluminum coated with a thin layer of gold. 336 mirrors are carefully aligned in a quadrant. Five complete assemblies ride on Astro-E2. Building the Telescopes

  9. Putting it all together

  10. How We Explore using Spectroscopy Kevin Boyce and Ilana Harrus

  11. Classroom Spectroscopy

  12. A Day at the Multiwavelength Stadium

  13. What Do X-rays Reveal? Let’s take a look at a supernova remnant! Multiwavelength View X-ray View

  14. Silicon Iron Calcium The elemental composition of a supernova remnant… …and exactly where those elements are located. What Can Spectroscopy Tell Us?

  15. The motion of material swirling around a black hole… …and relativistic effects that can probe for info like size. What Can Spectroscopy Tell Us?

  16. HXD Hard X-ray Detector • Detects higher energy X-rays between 10 to 700 keV. The most sensitive detector ever built for this range! XIS X-ray Imaging Spectrometers • Four CCDs, each served by its own telescope. • Detect X-rays with energies between 0.2 - 12 keV. How does Suzaku detect X-rays?

  17. What do scientists hope to learn with Suzaku? • When and where are the chemical elements created? • What happens when matter falls onto a black hole? • How does nature heat gas to X-ray emitting temperatures? Scientists look for answers to these questions to start to answer much bigger questions about how our Universe formed and evolved.

  18. Why “Astro-E2” ? This continues a collaboration between NASA and the Japanese in x-ray astronomy.

  19. Being Part of an International Team • What do you think about the fact that the Japanese collaborators had to learn English… but the US collaborators rarely speak any Japanese? • How do you feel about the Japanese attitude about sweets? • What are other physical and cultural obstacles involved in an international collaboration? • What are the opportunities?

  20. A Trip to Space

  21. “Building the Coolest X-ray Satellite” WITH TEACHER GUIDE X-ray Mirrors

  22. http://AstroE2LC.gsfc.nasa.gov

More Related