The Picture Shows 3,000 Stars In The Carina Constellation
NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or WISE, has
captured its first look at the starry sky that it will soon begin
surveying in infrared light.
NASA Photo
Launched on Dec. 14, WISE will scan the entire sky for millions
of hidden objects, including asteroids, "failed" stars and powerful
galaxies. WISE data will serve as navigation charts for other
missions such as NASA's Hubble and Spitzer Space Telescopes,
pointing them to the most interesting targets WISE finds.
A new WISE infrared image was taken shortly after the space
telescope's cover was removed, exposing the instrument's detectors
to starlight for the first time. The picture shows 3,000 stars in
the Carina constellation.
The image covers a patch of sky about three times larger than
the full moon. The patch was selected because it does not contain
any unusually bright objects, which could damage instrument
detectors if observed for too long. The picture was taken while the
spacecraft was staring at a fixed patch of sky and is being used to
calibrate the spacecraft's pointing system.
When the WISE survey begins, the spacecraft will scan the sky
continuously as it circles the globe, while an internal scan mirror
counteracts its motion. This allows WISE to take "freeze-frame"
snapshots every 11 seconds, resulting in millions of images of the
entire sky.
"Right now, we are busy matching the rate of the scan mirror to
the rate of the spacecraft, so we will capture sharp pictures as
our telescope sweeps across the sky," said William Irace, the
mission's project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in
Pasadena, CA.
To sense the infrared glow of stars and galaxies, the WISE
spacecraft cannot give off any detectable infrared light of its
own. This is accomplished by chilling the telescope and detectors
to ultra-cold temperatures. The coldest of WISE's detectors will
operate at less than 8 Kelvin, or minus 445 Fahrenheit.
The first sky survey will be complete in six months, followed by
a second scan of one-half of the sky lasting three months. The WISE
mission ends when the frozen hydrogen that keeps the instrument
cold evaporates away, an event expected to occur in October
2010.
Preliminary survey images are expected to be released six months
later, in April 2011, with the final atlas and catalog coming after
another 11 months in March 2012. Selected images will be released
to the public beginning in February 2010.