NASA Sponsors Studies of Next Generation Astronomy Missions

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Feb. 15, 2008

Grey Hautaluoma
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-0668
grey.hautaluoma-1@xxxxxxxx 

RELEASE: 08-054

NASA SPONSORS STUDIES OF NEXT GENERATION ASTRONOMY MISSIONS

WASHINGTON - NASA has selected 19 science teams to conduct yearlong 
studies of new concepts for its next generation of major 
observatories. The studies will help NASA make decisions about how it 
explores the heavens in the future, following the Astronomy and 
Astrophysics Decadal Survey.

Every 10 years, astronomers and physicists from across the U.S. work 
with the National Academy of Sciences to define the future research 
directions for the fields of astronomy and astrophysics. The science 
teams' work is part of an effort to ensure that technical and cost 
input is accurate for this upcoming Astronomy and Astrophysics 
Decadal Survey. The survey produces directions that guide federal 
agencies such as NASA and the National Science Foundation in planning 
their programs over the coming decade. 

"Astrophysics is truly in a golden age, revolutionizing our knowledge 
of topics as diverse and compelling as the origin and evolution of 
the universe, the physics of black holes and the distribution and 
habitability of planetary systems across our galaxy," said Alan 
Stern, associate administrator for the Science Mission Directorate at 
NASA Headquarters, Washington. "The exciting new astrophysics mission 
concept studies we are funding will seed preparations for 
astronomical space missions and paradigm-shifting discoveries across 
the early 21st century. Today, NASA's Science Mission Directorate is 
setting sail on a whole new chapter in continued U.S. leadership in 
astrophysics."

The concept studies total approximately $12 million in fiscal years 
2008 and 2009, ranging in cost from $250,000 to $1 million. Among the 
ideas selected for further study as potential new space telescopes 
are: 

-A study of the organic molecules in interstellar space and 
star-forming clouds (Scott Sandford, NASA's Ames Research Center, 
Moffett Field, Calif.);
-A census of black holes in our galaxy and distant galaxies and of the 
birth of stellar black holes in the early universe (Jonathan 
Grindlay, Harvard College Observatory, Cambridge, Mass.); 
-A test of theories that predict a rapid inflationary expansion when 
the universe was less than a fraction of a second old by 
characterizing the distribution of distant galaxies (Gary Melnick, 
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory, Cambridge); 
-Observations of faint signatures of polarized light in the cosmic 
microwave background that will also reveal information about 
inflationary expansion (Stephan Meyer, University of Chicago);
-Exploration of the origins of cosmic rays (James Adams, NASA's 
Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, Ala.). 

Several different methods to search for and characterize exoplanets, 
planets that orbit a star outside our solar system, also were chosen. 
Among these approaches are:

- Precise mapping of the movements of stars induced by planets 
circling them (Geoffrey Marcy, University of California, Berkeley);
-Direct imaging of giant planets around nearby stars (Mark Clampin, 
NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md.; Olivier Guyon, 
University of Arizona; Tuscon; John Trauger and Michael Shao, Jet 
Propulsion Laboratory, Pasadena, Calif.);
-Imaging nearby Earth-sized worlds using large telescopes with 
multiple instruments and separate spacecraft to block the light from 
these exoplanets' host star (Webster Cash, University of Colorado, 
Boulder; David Spergel, Princeton University, N.J.). 

Some of the proposals explore a powerful new combination of telescopes 
and instruments optimized for observing the tenuous filaments of 
intergalactic hydrogen gas known as the cosmic web gas (Kenneth 
Sembach, Space Telescope Science Institute, Baltimore) or star 
formation in our own and distant galaxies (Paul Scowen, Arizona State 
University, Tempe). 

Another mission would place two laser beacons on Mars. Precise 
measurements of the distance to these beacons would provide the most 
stringent test yet of Einstein's theory of general relativity (Thomas 
Murphy, University of California, San Diego). 

NASA also will sponsor studies about how to create the next generation 
of extremely precise and large optics for X-ray and optical astronomy 
(Roger Brissenden; Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory; Marc 
Postman, Space Telescope Science Institute). Another study 
investigates the possibility of putting an extremely large array of 
radio telescopes on the lunar surface to map clouds of hydrogen gas 
that formed during the infancy of our universe, even before the first 
stars (Jacqueline Hewitt, MIT; Cambridge; Joseph Lazio, Naval 
Research Laboratory, Washington).

"The number, range, and quality of the proposals submitted indicate 
very powerfully the level of enthusiasm in the community for 
addressing frontier astrophysics research and employing the very 
latest technologies," said Jon Morse, division director for 
Astrophysics, NASA Headquarters. "This early investment directed 
toward the decadal study will pay off in the coming years."

The studies' results are expected in March 2009. Concepts that rank 
highly in the decadal survey may result in missions that would launch 
after the suite of missions in development such as the Gamma-ray 
Large Area Space Telescope, scheduled to launch in May, the Kepler 
mission, scheduled to launch in 2009, and the James Webb Space 
Telescope, scheduled to launch in 2013. 

For more information on NASA and agency programs, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov

	
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