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Planck Telescope Behaves Well In Cold Vacuum
Paris, France (ESA) Aug 16, 2006 ESA's Planck space telescope was removed last week from the Large Space Simulator (LSS) at ESTEC, ESA's research and technology centre in Noordwijk, the Netherlands, after a thorough two-week test in temperatures down to -178 degrees Celsius. The test is an important milestone towards launch in 2008. Once in space, Planck will investigate cosmic background radiation: the remnants of the Big Bang over fourteen billion years ago. The telescope will make observations in the far-infrared spectrum; this can only be achieved using super-cooled instruments. It is essential to test the telescope at very low temperatures - a task highly suited to ESA's Large Space Simulator.
Cold vacuum Videogrammetry is used to get a clearer picture of the changes in shape. Thousands of photographs, taken from many different angles, are used to build up a three-dimensional image of the mirrors, their structural frame and the place where the telescope's cameras will be mounted. This process is repeated at several temperatures.
Arithmetic Earlier this year, Planck's mirrors were tested individually without the telescope structural frame at Alcatel, in Cannes, France. The results of their videogrammetry tests met expectations. Alcatel Alenia Space France is Prime Contractor to ESA for the Planck spacecraft. Preparations for the mission continue at ESTEC. All the components needed to complete the spacecraft will be delivered and tested together in the coming months. Eventually the flight model will undergo vibration testing, acoustic testing, high and low temperature testing, as well as various tests of the computers and communications equipment on board.
Spinner If everything goes to plan, at the end of 2007 Planck will pass its 'flight readiness review': a last step before proceeding with launch activities in 2008. Planck will be launched together with ESA's Herschel spacecraft, itself an infra-red space telescope of a different kind, by ESA's own Ariane-5 ECA heavy-lift launch vehicle. Related Links http://www.esa.int/esaCP/SEMKMRY7QQE_index_0.html
Kepler Mirror Arrives at Ball Aerospace for Test and Integration Boulder CO (SPX) Aug 09, 2006 The largest optical mirror ever built for a mission beyond Earth's orbit has arrived at Ball Aerospace and Technologies Corp. for environmental testing and spacecraft integration. NASA's Kepler mission, with a field of view 70,000 times greater than the Hubble Space Telescope, will attempt to detect Earth-like planets orbiting stars beyond our solar system. |
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