NASA’s WISE eye on the Universe begins its all-sky survey mission on infrared
14 December 2009
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VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE, Calif. - NASA's Wide-field Infrared
Survey Explorer, or WISE, lifted off over the Pacific Ocean this
morning on its way to map the entire sky in infrared frequency.
A Delta II rocket carrying the spacecraft launched from Vandenberg
Air Force Base in California. The rocket deposited WISE into a
polar orbit 326 miles above Earth.
Engineers acquired a signal from the spacecraft via NASA's
Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System just 10 seconds after the
spacecraft separated from the rocket.
Approximately three minutes later, WISE re-oriented itself with
its solar panels facing the sun to generate its own power.
17 minutes later valves on the cryostat, a chamber of super-cold
hydrogen ice that cools the WISE instrument, opened.
Because the instrument sees the infrared, or heat, signatures
of objects, it must be kept at chilly temperatures - its coldest
detectors are less than minus 447 degrees Fahrenheit.
WISE will see the infrared “colors” of the whole sky with
sensitivity and resolution far better than the last infrared sky
survey, performed 26 years ago.
Just about everything in the universe glows in infrared, which
means the mission will catalog a variety of astronomical targets,
among wich Near-Earth asteroids, stars, planet-forming disks and
distant galaxies. Hundreds of millions of objects will populate
the WISE atlas, providing astronomers and other space missions with
a long-lasting infrared roadmap.
More information about the WISE mission is available online at:
http://www.nasa.gov/wise
Source: NASA










