A peep into the Past.... A foray into the Future.... !!??

by SamirJ | May 2, 2009 at 11:48 am
91 views | 5 Recommendations | 2 comments

Photos

Space Telescopes | Photo 02

Space Telescopes | Photo 02

see larger image

uploaded by SamirJ

British scientists are planning to launch a pair of space telescopes,  viz. Herschel and Planck (worth £1.8 billion) later this month. The purpose behind their launch will be to provide answers to some of the biggest questions related to our existence: How did we get to where we are now, and where are we likely to end up??

A long and detailed story, but its worth reading. After all, the mission is being financed by the all the taxpayers of the country. So one should know as to where their hard earned money is being used.

Personally I am not a very big fan of space misssions.... but space is one thing which has been in my fantasy world since my childhood....

Whether or not we get the answers related to our existence and our future and what impact or importance would that have on our ongoing lives remains to be seen....

Each telescope is designed to probe the deepest recesses of space to unravel the origins of matter, from the earliest beginnings of the Universe some 13.7 billion years ago to the creation of the stars, galaxies and planets.

One of the telescopes, called Planck, will study in unprecedented detail the ancient "fossilised" radiation left over as a relic of the Big Bang. The analysis could help to explain how the Universe formed through a process of rapid expansion, called inflation, in the first fractions of a second after the Big Bang itself.

The other telescope, called Herschel, will concentrate on the invisible, infrared radiation emitted by the star-forming regions of the galaxies in the hope of explaining how stellar objects, from stars like the Sun to planets such as Earth, can form from clouds of cosmic gas, dust and debris.

Scientists involved in the twin mission hope that the data gleaned from instruments on board each telescope will enable them to fill in the remaining mysteries of how the Universe came into existence, how it evolved and how it is likely to end – if indeed it ever will.

"We're looking at the physics at the very beginning of the physical universe," said Professor David Southwood, director of science at the European Space Agency, which is scheduled to launch the satellites from its station in Kourou, French Guyana on 14 May. Instruments on board the Planck telescope, named after the German physicist Max Planck, will be kept at minus 272.7C – just 0.3 degrees above absolute zero – in order to detect the cosmic background radiation left over from the Big Bang.

"These results will allow us to test our theories of the Big Bang and could completely change our understanding of the origin and development of our Universe and even predict its future," said Professor George Efstathiou of Cambridge University.

"By understanding the process of inflation, we make contact with fundamental physics."

Herschel, meanwhile, will gather infrared radiation emitted from the vast dust clouds of space where stars and galaxies are forming. With its 3.5-metre-wide mirror, Herschel will be the biggest telescope in space, said Professor Matt Griffin of Cardiff University.

"The results could reveal how stars like the Sun are forming in our own galaxy today, how the galaxies grew and evolved over cosmic time, and how planetary systems can develop from the dust and gas around young stars," Professor Griffin said.

Both telescopes will be launched on the same Arianne V rocket, which will take them to their final, and separate, resting orbits about 1.5 million kilometres (930,000 miles) from Earth.

It will take about six months before the first data is received at a listening station built near a monastery in Western Australia, 125 miles from Perth.

recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
huneds

Hmm...

"Whether or not we get the answers related to our existence and our future and what impact or importance would that have on our ongoing lives remains to be seen...."

That is a great statement!

Good information though.

You are doing good my friend, keep it up.

0
SamirJ

Thanks mate!

This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

What is NowPublic?

NowPublic lets people work together to cover news events around the world.

Find out more

Crowd Power

huneds
First Flagged at 1:18 PM, May 2, 2009 by huneds
These members have powered this story:

Related Stories

Recommendations (5)

Most recently recommended by:
 

closeSign in to NowPublic

is reporting from