ESA's Integral was launched on 17 October 2002, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, on a mission to observe the ever-changing, powerful, and extreme cosmos.
"For over two decades, Integral has shown us time and time again how important it is to look at the sky in gamma-ray light," notes Jan-Uwe Ness, ESA's Integral Project Scientist. "Some of the bursts of light associated with extreme physical events in our Universe can only be fully understood if we catch the light rays that come from the very core of the blasts: the gamma rays."
Unlike visible and radio light coming from space, which we can observe from the ground, cosmic gamma-rays can only be captured in space. This is because Earth's atmosphere acts as a shield to protect us from these harmful rays.
"Integral has transformed our understanding of the dynamic high-energy Universe and physics in extreme conditions," adds Prof. Carole Mundell, ESA Director of Science.
"That Integral's spacecraft and instrumentation have performed so exquisitely well for so many years is testament to the quality of the technology developed by the European scientific community and space industry at the turn of the millennium, and the science and engineering teams at ESA who have operated this mission ever since. Congratulations to all our communities for their dedication and achievements."
Nowadays, scientists trace the origin of 'longer' GRB events lasting several seconds to the runaway collapse of massive stars that go supernova, while shorter bursts are due to black holes and neutron stars smashing into each other.
"What I find impressive about Integral are its unexpected discoveries," remarks Jan-Uwe. "It turned out that Integral was ideal for tasks not at all foreseen when the mission was conceived. An example is its ability to track down the sources in the sky that generated some of the gravitational waves and ultrahigh-energy neutrinos caught by specialised instruments on the ground."
At the time of Integral's launch, scientists were not even sure whether gravitational waves could ever be directly detected; the first observation of these elusive ripples in spacetime was made 13 years after Integral's launch by the LIGO gravitational wave detectors in the US, in 2015.
Two more recent findings focus on an extremely rare 0.1-second magnetar outburst that emitted as much energy as our Sun produces in half a million years, and the discovery that thermonuclear explosions drive jets in a neutron star.
Three features of Integral's instrumentation have made these many discoveries possible: a very large field-of-view covering about 900 square degrees of the sky in the most energetic X- and gamma rays; the ability to obtain, simultaneously, detailed images and spectra at the highest energies; the monitoring capability of the X-ray and optical cameras to help pinpoint the gamma-ray sources.
"The wealth of data collected over two decades will be stored at the Integral Science Legacy Archive. It will be essential for future research and to inspire a new generation of astronomers and engineers to develop exciting new missions."
Following the end of its science observations, the spacecraft will continue to orbit Earth for four more years. ESA engineers will monitor the satellite until it re-enters Earth's atmosphere in early 2029. Thanks toa special four-thruster burn executed back in 2015, the satellite's entry into the atmosphere will meet ESA's pledge to minimise space debris.
Related Links
Integral Space Telescope
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