• A toaster-sized NASA instrument captured a UV scene of the Milky

    From PopularScience-Space@1337:1/100 to All on Fri Sep 22 23:40:15 2023
    A toaster-sized NASA instrument captured a UV scene of the Milky Way

    Date:
    Wed, 05 Jul 2023 18:30:00 +0000

    Description:
    Southwest Research Institutes Norm Pelletier prepares the Ultraviolet Spectrograph (UVS) for delivery and integration onto the European Space Agencys JUICE spacecraft. As part of a 10-instrument payload to study Jupiter and its large moons, UVS will measure ultraviolet spectra that scientists
    will use to study the composition and structure of the atmospheres of these bodies and how they interact with Jupiters massive magnetosphere. Southwest Research Institute The JUICE spacecraft is well on its way to Jupiter to
    study the gas giants icy moons. The post A toaster-sized NASA instrument captured a UV scene of the Milky Way appeared first on Popular Science .

    FULL STORY ====================================================================== Southwest Research Institutes Norm Pelletier prepares the Ultraviolet Spectrograph (UVS) for delivery and integration onto the European Space Agencys JUICE spacecraft. As part of a 10-instrument payload to study Jupiter and its large moons, UVS will measure ultraviolet spectra that scientists
    will use to study the composition and structure of the atmospheres of these bodies and how they interact with Jupiters massive magnetosphere. Southwest Research Institute

    Its been almost two months since the European Space Agencys JUpiter ICy Moons Explorer (JUICE) launched and the spacecraft has successfully collected its first ultraviolet data. The spacecrafts Ultraviolet Spectrograph (UVS) instrument is one of three projects that make up NASAs contribution to the space mission to focus on our solar systems largest planet and its moons. The spacecraft will explore potentially habitable worlds located around the gas giant and investigate Jupiter as an archetype for gas giants in our solar system and beyond.

    [Related: Follow the JUICE mission as it launches to Jupiter and its many mysterious moons .]

    As JUICE begins its eight year, 4.1-billion-mile roundabout journey to the Jovian system, the spacecraft is deploying and activating multiple antennas, booms, sensors, and instruments. The UVS instrument is the latest to succeed in this critical task.

    The UVS was developed by the Southwest Research Institute (SwRI) in San Antonio, Texas.

    A bit smaller than a microwave, UVS weighs just over 40 pounds and draws 7.5 watts of power. It is designed to determine the relative concentrations of various elements and molecules in the atmospheres of Jupiters moons once it reaches the Jovian system.

    Our team of SwRI scientists traveled to Darmstadt, Germany, to put JUICE-UVS through its paces, JUICE-UVS principal investigator Randy Gladstone said in a statement . On June 20, we opened the UVS aperture door to collect UV light from space for the first time. Soon after, we observed a swath of the sky to verify the instrument was performing well.

    A segment of this data was imaged by the team just as the UVS scanned a swath of the Milky Way. The SwRI-led Ultraviolet Spectrograph (UVS) aboard ESAs Jupiter Icy Moons Explorer, JUICE, has successfully completed its initial commissioning following the spacecrafts April 14 launch. This segment of JUICE-UVS data shows a swath of the southern sky, revealing many UV-bright stars in the Milky Way near the southern constellation Carina on the left.
    The cloud-like structure on the right is a nearby galaxy called the Large Magellanic Cloud. CREDIT: ESA/NASA/SwRI/P. Molyneux/M. Versteeg/S. Ferrell/T. Greathouse/M. Davis.

    UVS is the fifth instrument in a series of spectrographs developed by SwRI
    for other spacecraft, including ESAs Rosetta comet orbiter and NASAs Pluto-bound New Horizons. It will get close-up views of three of Jupiters Galilean moons Europa, Ganymede, and Callisto.

    These celestial bodies are all thought to have liquid water beneath their icy surfaces . It will record the ultraviolet light that is emitted, transmitted, and reflected by these bodies, which could reveal the composition of their surfaces and their atmosphere, as well as how both interact with the planet and its enormous magnetosphere.

    [Related: This hot Jupiter exoplanet unexpectedly hangs out with a super-Earth .]

    In 2024, a similar instrument called Europa-UVS will launch aboard NASAs Europa Clipper . This spacecraft is scheduled to take a more direct route to arrive at the Jovian system roughly 15 months before JUICE, and will focus on studying Europas habitability. Europa is the smallest of Jupiters Galilean moons and one of at least 90 known moons orbiting the gas giant.

    Having two UVS instruments making measurements in the Jupiter system at roughly the same time will offer exciting complementary science
    possibilities, principal investigator of Europa-UVS and deputy PI for JUICE-UVS Kurt Retherford said in a statement .

    The JUICE missions will be the first close-ups of Jupiters moons since NASAs Galileo probe visited the gas giant from 1995 and 2003 and the spacecraft and science instruments were constructed by teams from 15 European countries, Japan, and the United States.

    The post A toaster-sized NASA instrument captured a UV scene of the Milky Way appeared first on Popular Science . Articles may contain affiliate links
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