Showing posts with label jwst. Show all posts
Showing posts with label jwst. Show all posts

Friday, June 4, 2010

World Science Festival in NY

As many of your probably already know, the World Science Festival is going on now. While there are lots of very interesting (but somewhat expensive for a family) talks and lectures, there are two free events which are interesting and fun:

  1. The science fair in Washington Square Park on Sunday July 6th
  2. The full scale model of the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) currently on display at Battery Park (read about it here). NASA ships this out to various conferences and meetings, and is really impressive (yes, they are going to launch something that big into space on a rocket - not a shuttle.) JWST is one of the biggest projects going on in astronomy today (esp. space-based astronomy). To learn more about it, listen to this interview with Dr. Mark Clampin of NASA.
Enjoy, and I really hope to be posting my interviews soon!

Sunday, May 23, 2010

It's not just a Museum

Scientists at the American Museum of Natural History conduct a lot of research as well. Read below about an instrument they are building for the James Webb Space Telescope, NASA's long-awaited to the Hubble Space Telescope. Enjoy!


A wafer-thin titanium disk, nearly two inches in diameter and punctured with seven perfect holes, will launch into space with the James Webb Space Telescope in 2014. Called a non-redundant mask, this tool filters light coming from very bright objects like stars to dramatically improve a telescope’s resolution for fainter objects. Conceived of on the sixth floor of the Rose Center for Earth and Space at the American Museum of Natural History, this non-redundant mask was described in a white paper submitted to the National Academy of Sciences’ Astronomy & Astrophysics Decadal Survey and will launch in the Canadian Space Agency's Fine Guidance Sensor Tunable Filter Imager on board the James Webb Space Telescope.

“We designed a non-redundant mask for the space telescope late in the Webb project, but it was accepted because it improved resolution by more than a factor of two and is so easy to implement,” says Anand Sivaramakrishnan, chief instrumentation scientist in the Museum’s Department of Astrophysics. “This is not a new technique—it was invented for radio astronomy in the late 1950s and revised for ground-based astronomy in the late 1990s. But this is the first time it will be used in space.”

Sivaramakrishnan and his team designed non-redundant masks for ground-based telescopes like Palomar and Gemini; one such mask is currently assisting the Museum’s Project 1640 to image extrasolar planets on the 200-inch telescope at Palomar.

The new mask for the space telescope was designed using a simple concept. By punching holes in a metal plate, much of the light from a telescope’s primary mirror is obscured. The beams selected by the mask come through to the image, turning an imaging telescope into an interferometer, an instrument that spreads light into a complex fringe pattern that reveals the presence of close faint structure around a bright object.

Non-redundant masks improve a conventional telescope’s resolution by a factor of 2.44 so that objects very close to each other can be resolved in an image. On the ground, the mask enables objects about 100 times fainter than a bright star to be imaged. But in space, a non-redundant mask that is part of an exceptionally stable space telescope should be able to detect objects 10,000 times fainter than the nearby bright object or star. Extrasolar planets can be directly imaged by the James Webb Space Telescope, a large infrared telescope with a 6.5 meter primary mirror, the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope.

The mask conceived of at the Museum for the James Webb Space Telescope is 50mm in diameter. Its seven holes are hexagonal in shape to maximize the amount of light passing through, but they are also smaller than their corresponding mirror segments in order to correct for a potential misalignment of the telescope’s mirror and the mask. Finally, the mask was designed so that none of the telescope’s supporting struts arch across holes.

“Our initial observational targets will be proto-planets and Jupiter-like planets in the constellation Taurus and other nearly stellar nurseries,” says Sivaramakrishnan. “But in addition to planets and faint companions, images obtained with the mask can also reveal regions around supermassive black holes in the centers of galaxies as well as the host galaxies around quasars to see how these incredibly powerful sources affect their environments.”

The “JAM Team,” or the James Webb Space Telescope Aperture Masking group led by Sivaramakrishnan, includes Peter Tuthill and Michael Ireland of the University of Sydney and James Lloyd of Cornell University. The team also counts David Lafrenière of the University of Montreal, Frantz Martinache of the Subaru Telescope, and Rémi Soummer of the Space Telescope Science Institute as members. Barry McKernan and Saavik Ford, both affiliated with the Museum and at the City University of New York, broaden the scientific goals of this masking project to include black holes and quasars. Sivaramakrishnan’s non-redundant masking study is funded by the National Science Foundation and NASA.

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

Follow the progress of JWST

NASA is currently working on the James Webb Space Telescope, the "successor" to the Hubble Space Telescope (I use the quotes because JWST will NOT be able to reproduce everything that Hubble can do now). To follow their progress, go here. Enjoy!

Saturday, January 30, 2010

JWST and Exoplanets

As NASA works on constructing the James Webb Space Telescope, the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers are thinking of what science questions it can possibly answer. Go here to read an article on what it can do to the field of extra-solar planet research.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

James Webb Space Telescope website

NASA has just unveiled a new website for the under-construction James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), its successor to the Hubble Space Telescope. For more information on JWST (astronomers and government agencies share a love of acronyms), I encourage you to listen to this interview with Dr. Mark Clampin on NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, one of the project scientists on JWST. Enjoy!

Thursday, December 18, 2008

NASA News Feature on James Webb Space Telescope

Available here is a NASA news feature on the James Webb Space Telescope (JWST), the successor to the Hubble Space Telescope (which hopefully will survive for many years to come). For more information on JWST, listen to this interview with Dr. Clampin on NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Enjoy!