NASA's WISE Mission Arrives at Launch Site

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Aug. 17, 2009

George H. Diller
Kennedy Space Center, Fla. 
321-867-2468
george.h.diller@nasa.gov 

Whitney Clavin 
Jet Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.
818-354-4673
whitney.clavin@jpl.nasa.gov

RELEASE: 39-09

NASA'S WISE MISSION ARRIVES AT LAUNCH SITE

PASADENA, Calif. -- NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer, or 
WISE, has arrived at its last stop on Earth -- Vandenberg Air Force 
Base, Calif. 

WISE is scheduled to blast into space in December, aboard a United 
Launch Alliance Delta II rocket from NASA's Space Launch Complex 2. 
Orbiting around Earth, it will scan the entire sky at infrared 
wavelengths, unveiling hundreds of thousands of asteroids, and 
hundreds of millions of stars and galaxies.

The spacecraft arrived at Vandenberg along the central California 
coast today, after a winding journey via truck from Ball Aerospace & 
Technologies Corporation in Boulder, Colo. Ball built the mission's 
spacecraft; its telescope and science instrument were built by Space 
Dynamics Laboratory in Logan, Utah. 

"WISE has arrived and is almost ready to go," said William Irace, the 
mission's project manager at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, 
Pasadena, Calif. "After we check the spacecraft out and fill the 
telescope cooling tanks with solid hydrogen, we'll mate it to the 
rocket and launch."

WISE is an infrared space telescope like two currently orbiting 
missions, NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope and the Herschel Space 
Observatory, a European Space Agency mission with important NASA 
participation. But, unlike these missions, WISE will survey the 
entire sky. It is designed to cast a wide net to catch all sorts of 
unseen cosmic treasures. Millions of images from the survey will 
serve as rough maps for other observatories, such as Spitzer and 
NASA's upcoming James Webb Space Telescope, guiding them to 
intriguing targets.

"WISE will survey the cosmic landscape in the infrared so that future 
telescopes can home in on the most interesting 'properties,'" said 
Edward Wright, the principal investigator for the mission at UCLA. 

The infrared surveyor will pick up the heat from a cornucopia of 
objects, both near and far. It will find hundreds of thousands of new 
asteroids in our main asteroid belt, and hundreds of near-Earth 
objects, which are comets and asteroids with orbits that pass 
relatively close to Earth. The mission will uncover the coldest 
stars, called brown dwarfs, perhaps even one closer to us than our 
closest known neighbor, Proxima Centauri, which is 4 light-years 
away. More distant finds will include nurseries of stars, swirling 
planet-building disks and the universe's most luminous galaxies 
billions of light-years away.

The data will help answer fundamental questions about how solar 
systems and galaxies form, and will provide the astronomical 
community with mountains of data to mine.

"WISE will create a legacy that endures for decades," said Peter 
Eisenhardt, the mission's project scientist at JPL. "Today, we still 
refer to the catalogue of our predecessor, the Infrared Astronomical 
Satellite, which operated in 1983."

The Infrared Astronomical Satellite was a joint infrared survey 
mission between NASA, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands. WISE's 
survey, thanks to next-generation technology, will be hundreds of 
times more sensitive.

The mission will scan the sky from a sun-synchronous orbit, 500 
kilometers (about 311 miles) above Earth. After a one-month checkout 
period, it will map the whole sky over a period of six months. 
Onboard frozen hydrogen, which will cool the infrared detectors, is 
expected to last several months longer, allowing WISE to map much of 
the sky a second time and see what has changed.

JPL manages the Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer for NASA's Science 
Mission Directorate. The mission's principal investigator, Edward 
Wright, is at UCLA. The mission was competitively selected under 
NASA's Explorers Program managed by the Goddard Space Flight Center, 
Greenbelt, Md. The science instrument was built by the Space Dynamics 
Laboratory, Logan, Utah, and the spacecraft was built by Ball 
Aerospace & Technologies Corp., Boulder, Colo. Science operations and 
data processing will take place at the Infrared Processing and 
Analysis Center at the California Institute of Technology in 
Pasadena. Caltech manages JPL for NASA. 

NASA's Launch Services Program at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida 
is responsible for government oversight of the Delta II and launch 
countdown management.

More information is online at:

http://wise.astro.ucla.edu 

	
-end-



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