NASA's Wise Mission Sees Skies Ablaze With Blazars

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April 12, 2012

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

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

RELEASE: 12-109

NASA'S WISE MISSION SEES SKIES ABLAZE WITH BLAZARS

WASHINGTON -- Astronomers are actively hunting a class of supermassive 
black holes throughout the universe called blazars thanks to data 
collected by NASA's Wide-field Infrared Survey Explorer (WISE). The 
mission has revealed more than 200 blazars and has the potential to 
find thousands more. 

Blazars are among the most energetic objects in the universe. They 
consist of supermassive black holes actively "feeding," or pulling 
matter onto them, at the cores of giant galaxies. As the matter is 
dragged toward the supermassive hole, some of the energy is released 
in the form of jets traveling at nearly the speed of light. Blazars 
are unique because their jets are pointed directly at us. 

"Blazars are extremely rare because it's not too often that a 
supermassive black hole's jet happens to point towards Earth," said 
Franceso Massaro of the Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and 
Cosmology near Palo Alto, Calif., and principal investigator of the 
research, published in a series of papers in the Astrophysical 
Journal. "We came up with a crazy idea to use WISE's infrared 
observations, which are typically associated with lower-energy 
phenomena, to spot high-energy blazars, and it worked better than we 
hoped." 

The findings ultimately will help researchers understand the extreme 
physics behind super-fast jets and the evolution of supermassive 
black holes in the early universe. 

WISE surveyed the entire celestial sky in infrared light in 2010, 
creating a catalog of hundreds of millions of objects of all types. 
Its first batch of data was released to the larger astronomy 
community in April 2011 and the full-sky data were released last 
month. 

Massaro and his team used the first batch of data, covering more than 
one-half the sky, to test their idea that WISE could identify 
blazars. Astronomers often use infrared data to look for the weak 
heat signatures of cooler objects. Blazars are not cool; they are 
scorching hot and glow with the highest-energy type of light, called 
gamma rays. However, they also give off a specific infrared signature 
when particles in their jets are accelerated to almost the speed of 
light. 

One of the reasons the team wants to find new blazars is to help 
identify mysterious spots in the sky sizzling with high-energy gamma 
rays, many of which are suspected to be blazars. NASA's Fermi mission 
has identified hundreds of these spots, but other telescopes are 
needed to narrow in on the source of the gamma rays. 

Sifting through the early WISE catalog, the astronomers looked for the 
infrared signatures of blazars at the locations of more than 300 
gamma-ray sources that remain mysterious. The researchers were able 
to show that a little more than half of the sources are most likely 
blazars. 

"This is a significant step toward unveiling the mystery of the many 
bright gamma-ray sources that are still of unknown origin," said 
Raffaele D'Abrusco, a co-author of the papers from Harvard 
Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics in Cambridge, Mass. "WISE's 
infrared vision is actually helping us understand what's happening in 
the gamma-ray sky." 

The team also used WISE images to identify more than 50 additional 
blazar candidates and observed more than 1,000 previously discovered 
blazars. According to Massaro, the new technique, when applied 
directly to WISE's full-sky catalog, has the potential to uncover 
thousands more. 

"We had no idea when we were building WISE that it would turn out to 
yield a blazar gold mine," said Peter Eisenhardt, WISE project 
scientist at NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) in Pasadena, 
Calif., who is not associated with the new studies. "That's the 
beauty of an all-sky survey. You can explore the nature of just about 
any phenomenon in the universe." 

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

For more information about WISE, visit: 

http://www.nasa.gov/wise 

	
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