• NASA Selects Mission to Study Black Holes, Cosmic X-ray Mysteries (IXPE

    From baalke@1:2320/100 to sci.space.news on Wed Jan 4 00:33:44 2017
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    January 03, 2017

    RELEASE 17-002

    NASA Selects Mission to Study Black Holes, Cosmic X-ray Mysteries

    NASA has selected a science mission that will allow astronomers to explore, for the first time, the hidden details of some of the most extreme and exotic astronomical objects, such as stellar and supermassive black holes, neutron stars and pulsars.

    Objects such as black holes can heat surrounding gases to more than a million degrees. The high-energy X-ray radiation from this gas can be polarized
    - vibrating in a particular direction. The Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer (IXPE) mission will fly three space telescopes with cameras capable of measuring the polarization of these cosmic X-rays, allowing scientists to answer fundamental questions about these turbulent and extreme environments where gravitational, electric and magnetic fields are at their limits.

    "We cannot directly image what's going on near objects like black holes
    and neutron stars, but studying the polarization of X-rays emitted from
    their surrounding environments reveals the physics of these enigmatic objects," said Paul Hertz, astrophysics division director for the Science Mission Directorate at NASA Headquarters in Washington. "NASA has a great history
    of launching observatories in the Astrophysics Explorers Program with
    new and unique observational capabilities. IXPE will open a new window on the universe for astronomers to peer through. Today, we can only guess what
    we will find."

    NASA's Astrophysics Explorers Program requested proposals for new missions
    in September 2014. Fourteen proposals were submitted, and three mission concepts
    were selected for additional review by a panel of agency and external scientists. NASA determined the IXPE proposal provided the best science potential and most feasible development plan.

    The mission, slated for launch in 2020, will cost $188 million. This figure includes the cost of the launch vehicle and post-launch operations and
    data analysis. Principal Investigator Martin Weisskopf of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center in Huntsville, Alabama, will lead the mission. Ball Aerospace in Broomfield, Colorado, will provide the spacecraft and mission integration. The Italian Space Agency will contribute the polarization sensitive X-ray detectors, which were developed in Italy.

    NASA's Explorers Program provides frequent, low-cost access to space using principal investigator-led space science investigations relevant to the agency's astrophysics and heliophysics programs. The program has launched
    more than 90 missions, including Explorer 1 in 1958, which discovered
    the Van Allen radiation belts around the Earth, and the Cosmic Background Explorer mission, which led to a Nobel Prize. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center
    in Greenbelt, Maryland, manages the Explorers Program for the agency's Science

    Mission Directorate.

    For more information about the Explorers program, visit:

    http://explorers.gsfc.nasa.gov

    For information about NASA, visit:

    http://www.nasa.gov

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