logo
NASA's new space observatory is mapping the entire sky in 3D

NASA's new space observatory is mapping the entire sky in 3D

Yahoo02-05-2025
After passing all the necessary checks and calibrations, NASA says its SPHEREx space observatory is ready to embark on its expansive mission. As of May 1, the spacecraft has begun imaging a 3D map of the entire sky and its hundreds of millions of galaxies. But in order to complete such a massive objective, SPHEREx is going to need to take a lot of photos—about 3,600 per day over the next two years, to be more specific.
Pointed away from Earth about 404 miles overhead, the orbital observatory will circle the planet from north to south about 14.5 times each day as it images a single, circular strip of the sky. Given Earth's own solar orbit, it will only take about six months for SPHEREx to have glimpsed space in every direction at least once.
Technically, each picture is a composite of images from six separate detectors designed for specific light wavelengths. This set of six images is referred to as an exposure, with about 600 exposures produced by SPHEREx per day. SPHEREx also alters its position after every exposure, but it does not use thrusters to shift. Instead, it uses a system of spinning reaction wheels inside the spacecraft.
While other projects like COBE have previously mapped the whole sky, SPHEREx is the first to do it across so many color spectrums. Using spectroscopy, the observatory splits light across 102 infrared wavelengths that are invisible to the human eye. This will allow the observatory to construct a better 3D map that includes distances between galaxies in all directions, as well as measure the collective glow from every galaxy that's ever existed. The method also enables SPHEREx to provide information about a cosmic object's composition, which can help search for key ingredients for life like water molecules.
Peering deep into the sky will additionally provide details about the first fraction of a second that followed the big bang, when cosmic inflation expanded the universe a 'trillion-trillionfold,' according to NASA.
SPHEREx team members are already excited by what they've seen of the observatory.
'The performance of the instrument is as good as we hoped,' said principal investigator Jamie Bock. 'That means we're going to be able to do all the amazing science we planned on and perhaps even get some unexpected discoveries.'
'We're going to study what happened on the smallest size scales in the universe's earliest moments by looking at the modern universe on the largest scales,' said Jim Fanson, the mission's project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory. 'I think there's a poetic arc to that.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Scientists Prepare to Study Mars Rock With Signs of Ancient Life
Scientists Prepare to Study Mars Rock With Signs of Ancient Life

Yahoo

time35 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists Prepare to Study Mars Rock With Signs of Ancient Life

A new study using a novel form of spectroscopy is helping to advance the techniques necessary to analyze samples returned from Mars. Those samples won't be available until 2033, at the earliest, but one in particular—called "Sapphire Canyon"—could contain evidence of ancient life that makes it well worth the wait. The only problem is that, as with almost everything NASA is planning, that potential could be squandered entirely by the Trump administration's massive proposed budget cuts for science. Funding for the Mars Sample Return mission, which is obviously required for any of this to be possible, is very much in danger. Despite the Mars rock being called Sapphire Canyon, that isn't the name of the area from which it was taken. NASA's Perseverance rover chiseled the rock off a larger rock called Cheyava Falls, which boasts various mineral veins. That was last year; Sapphire Canyon has been the focus of excitement ever since. The rock exhibits a spotted pattern with multiple levels of organization. There are small, dark spots called "poppy seeds," as well as larger spots surrounded by a dark banding called "leopard spots." The leopard spots, in particular, could be the remnants of ancient microbial activity on Mars. This visual evidence is made more compelling by the fact that the Sherlock instrument onboard Perseverance also detected the presence of organic molecules in the rock. Finding boese things together, both the presence of organic molecules and signs of the metabolism of organic life, represents an enticing opportunity for NASA scientists. This is the Earth rock used as a stand-in for Sapphire Canyon. Credit: Nicholas Heinz The new study, released last week, shows that a new form of spectroscopy called Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy (O-PTIR) can read mineral composition even within these spots. It proved its process on an Earth rock with a similar pattern to Sapphire Canyon, beginning to demonstrate the efficacy of a process that they hope to apply to Mars rocks, too. Of course, geology by photo is only so reliable. To confirm their suspicions, NASA scientists need to get Sapphire Canyon back to Earth for direct study, but the all-important Mars Sample Return mission is very much in limbo. The MSR is one of the big potential losses in a proposed national federal budget that would cut overall NASA funding by about half. It's the sad reality of the current moment, in which exciting possibilities like this one, long in the works and already billions into its roadmap, get cut. The sample return mission is just one of many programs on the chopping block, and Sapphire Canyon is just one of many samples that the MSR plans to return.

Scientists Prepare to Study Mars Rock With Signs of Ancient Life
Scientists Prepare to Study Mars Rock With Signs of Ancient Life

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Scientists Prepare to Study Mars Rock With Signs of Ancient Life

A new study using a novel form of spectroscopy is helping to advance the techniques necessary to analyze samples returned from Mars. Those samples won't be available until 2033, at the earliest, but one in particular—called "Sapphire Canyon"—could contain evidence of ancient life that makes it well worth the wait. The only problem is that, as with almost everything NASA is planning, that potential could be squandered entirely by the Trump administration's massive proposed budget cuts for science. Funding for the Mars Sample Return mission, which is obviously required for any of this to be possible, is very much in danger. Despite the Mars rock being called Sapphire Canyon, that isn't the name of the area from which it was taken. NASA's Perseverance rover chiseled the rock off a larger rock called Cheyava Falls, which boasts various mineral veins. That was last year; Sapphire Canyon has been the focus of excitement ever since. The rock exhibits a spotted pattern with multiple levels of organization. There are small, dark spots called "poppy seeds," as well as larger spots surrounded by a dark banding called "leopard spots." The leopard spots, in particular, could be the remnants of ancient microbial activity on Mars. This visual evidence is made more compelling by the fact that the Sherlock instrument onboard Perseverance also detected the presence of organic molecules in the rock. Finding boese things together, both the presence of organic molecules and signs of the metabolism of organic life, represents an enticing opportunity for NASA scientists. This is the Earth rock used as a stand-in for Sapphire Canyon. Credit: Nicholas Heinz The new study, released last week, shows that a new form of spectroscopy called Optical Photothermal Infrared Spectroscopy (O-PTIR) can read mineral composition even within these spots. It proved its process on an Earth rock with a similar pattern to Sapphire Canyon, beginning to demonstrate the efficacy of a process that they hope to apply to Mars rocks, too. Of course, geology by photo is only so reliable. To confirm their suspicions, NASA scientists need to get Sapphire Canyon back to Earth for direct study, but the all-important Mars Sample Return mission is very much in limbo. The MSR is one of the big potential losses in a proposed national federal budget that would cut overall NASA funding by about half. It's the sad reality of the current moment, in which exciting possibilities like this one, long in the works and already billions into its roadmap, get cut. The sample return mission is just one of many programs on the chopping block, and Sapphire Canyon is just one of many samples that the MSR plans to return.

NASA's Webb telescope discovers previously unknown moon orbiting Uranus
NASA's Webb telescope discovers previously unknown moon orbiting Uranus

Yahoo

time5 hours ago

  • Yahoo

NASA's Webb telescope discovers previously unknown moon orbiting Uranus

WASHINGTON - Astronomers using what is considered to be the most powerful space telescope ever built say they have discovered a previously unknown moon orbiting Uranus, expanding the count of the planet's natural satellites to at least 29. According to NASA, scientists using the James Webb Space Telescope spotted the small moon earlier this year and gave it the initial designation of S/2025 U1. "This object was spotted in a series of 10 40-minute long-exposure images captured by the Near-Infrared Camera (NIRCam)," Maryame El Moutamid, lead scientist at the Southwest Research Institute's Solar System Science and Exploration Division in Boulder, Colorado, said in a statement. "It's a small moon but a significant discovery, which is something that even NASA's Voyager 2 spacecraft didn't see during its flyby nearly 40 years ago." The moon was estimated to be just six miles across and likely serves as the primary reason why previous missions, including a flyby by Voyager 2, have missed seeing the natural satellite until this year. S/2025 U1 is said to be the fourteenth member of Uranus' inner satellite system and the twenty-ninth overall. See The Objects Humans Left Behind On The Moon "No other planet has as many small inner moons as Uranus, and their complex inter-relationships with the rings hint at a chaotic history that blurs the boundary between a ring system and a system of moons," Matthew Tiscareno, a researcher at the SETI Institute in Mountain View, California, and a member of the Webb science team, stated. "Moreover, the new moon is smaller and much fainter than the smallest of the previously known inner moons, making it likely that even more complexity remains to be discovered." According to Nasa, Saturn has the most moons in our solar system, with the last count putting the number at 274, while both Mercury and Venus don't have any natural satellites. Like Uranus' other satellites, the new moon will eventually receive a formal name from the International Astronomical Union. The planet's moons have traditionally been named after characters from the works of William Shakespeare and Alexander Pope. Some of the known moons are Miranda, Ariel, Umbriel, Titania and Oberon. The Moon Is Now Considered A Vulnerable Cultural Heritage Site Astronomers say the Webb's latest findings reinforce the need for a future spacecraft mission around one of the least-studied planets in the solar system. NASA and other space agencies have discussed launching an orbiter in the 2030s, which would study the planet's atmosphere, rings and apparent growing number of article source: NASA's Webb telescope discovers previously unknown moon orbiting Uranus

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store