Planck Mission Peels Back Layers Of The Universe

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Jan. 11, 2011

Trent Perrotto 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-5241 
trent.j.perrotto@xxxxxxxx 

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


RELEASE: 11-011

PLANCK MISSION PEELS BACK LAYERS OF THE UNIVERSE

WASHINGTON -- The Planck mission released a new data catalogue Tuesday 
from initial maps of the entire sky. The catalogue includes thousands 
of never-before-seen dusty cocoons where stars are forming and some 
of the most massive clusters of galaxies ever observed. Planck is a 
European Space Agency (ESA) mission with significant contributions 
from NASA. 

"NASA is pleased to support this important mission, and we have 
eagerly awaited Planck's first discoveries," said Jon Morse, NASA's 
Astrophysics Division director at the agency's headquarters in 
Washington. "We look forward to continued collaboration with ESA and 
more outstanding science to come." 

Planck launched in May 2009 on a mission to detect light from just a 
few hundred thousand years after the Big Bang, an explosive event at 
the dawn of the universe approximately 13.7 billion years ago. The 
spacecraft's state-of-the-art detectors ultimately will survey the 
whole sky at least four times, measuring the cosmic microwave 
background, or radiation left over from the Big Bang. The data will 
help scientists decipher clues about the evolution, fate and fabric 
of our universe. While these cosmology results won't be ready for 
another two years or so, early observations of specific objects in 
our Milky Way galaxy, as well as more distant galaxies, are being 
released. 

"The data we're releasing now are from what lies between us and the 
cosmic microwave background," said Charles Lawrence, the U.S. project 
scientist for Planck at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, 
Calif. We ultimately will subtract these data out to get at our 
cosmic microwave background signal. But by themselves, these early 
observations offer up new information about objects in our universe 
-- both close and far away, and everything in between," Lawrence 
said. 

Planck observes the sky at nine wavelengths of light, ranging from 
infrared to radio waves. Its technology has greatly improved 
sensitivity and resolution over its predecessor missions, NASA's 
Cosmic Background Explorer and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe. 

The result is a windfall of data on known and never-before-seen cosmic 
objects. Planck has catalogued approximately 10,000 star-forming 
"cold cores," thousands of which are newly discovered. The cores are 
dark and dusty nurseries where baby stars are just beginning to take 
shape. 

They also are some of the coldest places in the universe. Planck's new 
catalogue includes some of the coldest cores ever seen, with 
temperatures as low as seven degrees above absolute zero, or minus 
447 degrees Fahrenheit. In order to see the coldest gas and dust in 
the Milky Way, Planck's detectors were chilled to only 0.1 kelvins. 

The new catalogue also contains some of the most massive clusters of 
galaxies known, including a handful of newfound ones. The most 
massive of these holds the equivalent of a million billion suns worth 
of mass, making it one of the most massive galaxy clusters known. 

Galaxies in our universe are bound together into these larger 
clusters, forming a lumpy network across the cosmos. Scientists study 
the clusters to learn more about the evolution of galaxies and dark 
matter and dark energy -- the exotic substances that constitute the 
majority of our universe. 

"Because Planck is observing the whole sky, it is giving us a 
comprehensive look at how all the smaller structures of the universe 
are connected to the whole," said Jim Bartlett, a U.S. Planck team 
member at JPL and the Astroparticule et Cosmologie-Universite Paris 
Diderot in France. 

Planck's new catalogue also includes unique data on the pools of hot 
gas that permeate roughly 14,000 smaller clusters of galaxies; the 
best data yet on the cosmic infrared background, which is made up of 
light from stars evolving in the early universe; and new observations 
of extremely energetic galaxies spewing radio jets. The catalogue 
covers about one-and-one-half sky scans. 

For more information about Planck, visit: 



http://www.nasa.gov/planck 




http://www.esa.int/SPECIALS/Planck/index.html   

	
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