NASA'S WMAP Project Completes Satellite Operations Mission Observed Universe's Oldest Light

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Oct. 06, 2010

J.D. Harrington      
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-5241      
j.d.harrington@xxxxxxxx 

Lynn Chandler                     
Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, Md. 
301-286-2806 
lynn.chandler-1@xxxxxxxx   


RELEASE: 10-244

NASA'S WMAP PROJECT COMPLETES SATELLITE OPERATIONS MISSION OBSERVED UNIVERSE'S OLDEST LIGHT

WASHINGTON -- After nine years of scanning the sky, the Wilkinson 
Microwave Anisotropy Probe (WMAP) space mission has concluded its 
observations of the cosmic microwave background, the oldest light in 
the universe. The spacecraft has not only given scientists their best 
look at this remnant glow, but also established the scientific model 
that describes the history and structure of the universe. 

"WMAP has opened a window into the earliest universe that we could 
scarcely imagine a generation ago," said Gary Hinshaw, an 
astrophysicist at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, 
Md., who manages the mission. "The team is still busy analyzing the 
complete nine-year set of data, which the scientific community 
eagerly awaits." 

WMAP was designed to provide a more detailed look at subtle 
temperature differences in the cosmic microwave background that were 
first detected in 1992 by NASA's Cosmic Background Explorer (COBE). 
The WMAP team has answered many longstanding questions about the 
universe's age and composition. WMAP acquired its final science data 
on Aug. 20. On Sept. 8, the satellite fired its thrusters, left its 
working orbit, and entered into a permanent parking orbit around the 
sun. 

"We launched this mission in 2001, accomplished far more than our 
initial science objectives, and now the time has come for a 
responsible conclusion to the satellite's operations," said Charles 
Bennett, WMAP's principal investigator at Johns Hopkins University in 
Baltimore. 

WMAP detects a signal that is the remnant afterglow of the hot young 
universe, a pattern frozen in place when the cosmos was only 380,000 
years old. As the universe expanded over the next 13 billion years, 
this light lost energy and stretched into increasingly longer 
wavelengths. Today, it is detectable as microwaves. 

WMAP is in the Guinness Book of World Records for "most accurate 
measure of the age of the universe." The mission established that the 
cosmos is 13.75 billion years old, with a degree of error of one 
percent. 

WMAP also showed that normal atoms make up only 4.6 percent of today's 
cosmos, and it verified that most of the universe consists of two 
entities scientists don't yet understand. 

Dark matter, which makes up 23 percent of the universe, is a material 
that has yet to be detected in the laboratory. Dark energy is a 
gravitationally repulsive entity which may be a feature of the vacuum 
itself. WMAP confirmed its existence and determined that it fills 72 
percent of the cosmos. 

Another important WMAP breakthrough involves a hypothesized cosmic 
"growth spurt" called inflation. For decades, cosmologists have 
suggested that the universe went through an extremely rapid growth 
phase within the first trillionth of a second it existed. WMAP's 
observations support the notion that inflation did occur, and its 
detailed measurements now rule out several well-studied inflation 
scenarios while providing new support for others. 

"It never ceases to amaze me that we can make a measurement that can 
distinguish between what may or may not have happened in the first 
trillionth of a second of the universe," says Bennett. 

WMAP was the first spacecraft to use the gravitational balance point 
known as Earth-Sun L2 as its observing station. The location is about 
930,000 miles or (1.5 million km) away. 

"WMAP gave definitive measurements of the fundamental parameters of 
the universe," said Jaya Bapayee, WMAP program executive at NASA 
Headquarters in Washington. "Scientists will use this information for 
years to come in their quest to better understand the universe." 

Launched as MAP on June 30, 2001, the spacecraft was later renamed 
WMAP to honor David T. Wilkinson, a Princeton University cosmologist 
and a founding team member who died in September 2002. 

For images and more information, visit: 


http://map.gsfc.nasa.gov   

	
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