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Hubble Update for “Teacher’s Thursday” on 10 April 2003 Max Mutchler Space Telescope Science Institute
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Hubble’s latest image…hot off the press! http://hubble.stsci.edu/newscenter/ (a proto-planetary nebula)
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Hubble launched into orbit on 24 April 1990 Baltimore, we have a problem: spherical aberration! Space Shuttle servicing missions: 1993, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2005, 2010 Behind-the-scenes: Observing the Helix Nebula with Hubble’s new workhorse, the Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) Hubble mission overview
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Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) in the clean room at Ball Aerospace in Boulder, Colorado
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This is the ACS group in front of a mockup of Hubble’s aft shroud, where the astronauts practiced installing ACS. I’m 3 rd from the left in the back row We are in the clean room at NASA Goddard in Maryland in August 2001.
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Space Shuttle Columbia astronauts installed ACS on 7 March 2002
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A more typical day at work….no astronauts, and not a clean room!
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Early ACS science highlights First images in April 2002: Tadpole, Cone, Mice, Omega Nebula Distant supernovae: accelerating universe, dark energy Behind-the-scenes sneak preview: Helix Nebula, Ultra Deep Field
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During the Leonid meteor shower on 19 November 2002, while the Hubble Space Telescope was pointed away from the oncoming meteors, it observed the Helix Nebula
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Hubble observations of the Helix Nebula during the Leonid meteor shower on 19 November 2002 Hubble’s scientific instruments:
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Two CCD chips with… …a gap between them… …and many cosmic rays. A single ACS Wide Field Channel (WFC) exposure
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Raw data must be carefully calibrated and have detector artifacts and cosmic rays removed before it can be used for scientific analyses, or for making informative color images. A cosmic ray A hot pixel Zooming-in on part of a raw ACS image
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The anatomy of a pseudo-scientific hoax: an “investigator” (editor of UFO magazine?) plays with a SOHO image in PhotoShop, until he gets a typical cosmic ray to look more colorful and smooth. He tries to cloak himself and his analysis with NASA’s air of scientific rigor, and immediately publishes the most far-fetched conclusion possible - not in a peer-reviewed scientific journal, but in a shamefully gullible newspaper. http://soho.nascom.nasa.gov/hotshots/2003_01_17/
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658 nm 502 nm OK, back to the Helix observations! We took exposures in a 3 x 3 mosaic pattern with two narrow-band filters that only allow light with wavelengths of 502 nm and 658 nm.
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Detector: ACS / WFC Filter: F502N [O III] doubly-ionized Oxygen emission 3 x 3 mosaic 18 exposures
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Detector: ACS / WFC Filter: F502N [O III] doubly-ionized Oxygen emission (assign blue color) 3 x 3 mosaic 18 exposures
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Detector: ACS / WFC Filter: F658N Hydrogen-alpha emission 3 x 3 mosaic 18 exposures
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Detector: ACS / WFC Filter: F658N Hydrogen-alpha emission (assign red color) 3 x 3 mosaic 18 exposures
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Well, I would have put the new ACS color image right here. But for now, there is just this teaser: an older color image made with WFPC2 data… Hubble’s new Helix Nebula will be released on “Astronomy Day” 10 May 2003. Watch for it in the news, or at: http://hubble.stsci.edu
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James Webb Space Telescope Launch planned for ~2010
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Forever in their debt…
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Hubble Update for “Teacher’s Thursday” on 10 April 2003 Any questions? mutchler@stsci.edu http://www.stsci.edu/~mutchler
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