NASA
Establishes New Office To Study Cosmic Phenomena
Science
Daily NASA has created a new office to study in more detail some of the
universe's most exotic phenomena: dark energy, black holes and cosmic microwave
background radiation.
The
Beyond Einstein program will build on the scientific contributions of the current
generation of missions like Chandra, Hubble, and WMAP. This program will blaze
new paths in the search for answers to questions about black holes, dark energy,
and other outstanding issues in modern astrophysics. (Credit: Image courtesy of
NASA)
The
new Einstein Probes Office will facilitate NASA's future medium-class science
missions to investigate these profound cosmic mysteries. The office will be housed
in the Beyond Einstein Program Office at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt,
Md.
The
Beyond Einstein Program consists of five proposed missions: two major observatories
and three smaller probes. Technology development already is under way on the proposed
observatories. The Laser Interferometer Space Antenna would orbit the sun measuring
gravitational waves in our galaxy and beyond. Constellation-X would view matter
falling into supermassive black holes.
The
proposed probes would investigate the nature of dark energy, the physics of the
Big Bang and the distribution and types of black holes in the universe. NASA previously
has supported initial mission concept studies for the Dark Energy, Inflation,
and Black Hole Finder probes. The agency currently is funding three other, more
detailed, dark energy mission concept studies.
NASA
and the U.S. Department of Energy have commissioned a National Research Council
committee to assess which of the Beyond Einstein missions should be developed
and launched first. The assessment will be based on scientific impact, technology
readiness and budgetary considerations. The committee's recommendations are due
to be released in September 2007.
"We
look forward to receiving the recommendations of the committee," said Jon
Morse, director of the Astrophysics Division in NASA's Science Mission Directorate,
Washington. "Adding this new office to the existing logistical support for
the Beyond Einstein Program will help us react swiftly to the committee's assessment."
The
Beyond Einstein Program is designed to provide key information to help answer
fundamental questions about the origin and evolution of the universe. The Beyond
Einstein spacecraft will build on such current NASA missions as the Hubble Space
Telescope, Chandra X-ray Observatory and Wilkinson Microwave Anisotropy Probe.
Note:
This story has been adapted from a news release issued by National Aeronautics
and Space Administration.