A robotic galaxy mapper may have just made its first discovery – by surviving an unexpected onslaught of space debris.
Scientists working with the European Space Agency's Gaia satellite
have found that the spacecraft is being peppered by far more
micrometeoroids – tiny specks of space dust – than had been anticipated.
The strikes shouldn't put Gaia in danger, although mission scientists
will have to watch closely as the spacecraft begins its scientific
observations. And the discovery might spell trouble for future
spacecraft headed to the same orbital position.
Launched in December 2013, Gaia's mission is to map roughly a billion stars in our galaxy
with high precision. This will help astronomers to understand more
about the Milky Way's structure and evolution. Already, Gaia has hit a
few technical snags, such as too much ice on its mirrors and too much
sunlight sneaking past its sunshield. To adjust to the troubles, the
Gaia team has delayed the first release of scientific data by nine months.
Point of contention
Troubleshooting Gaia is no mean feat because
the spacecraft is about 1.5 million kilometres from Earth, at the L2
Lagrange point. This is an unusual orbital position where the combined
gravitational forces of Earth and the sun allow a satellite to hover at a
fixed point on the night side of our planet.
A handful of previous satellites have made
the journey to L2 without noticing high levels of micrometeoroids.
Still, based on data about space dust around Earth, astronomers had
expected that modest amounts would regularly hit Gaia.
To make their measurements, the team needs to know
the direction that their satellite is pointing with unprecedented
accuracy, which means that Gaia is extremely sensitive to tiny changes
in its rotation rate. The detection of such changes revealed the
surprising number of nudges from micrometeoroid strikes.
"The rough expectation was one to ten per day," says Floor van Leeuwen,
an astronomer at the Institute of Astronomy in Cambridge, UK. "We are
observing at least 500 per day." The team think that many of the bits of
space dust are hitting Gaia's sunshield, although the origin of the
micrometeoroids is not yet clear.
Planet leftovers
"There is a suggestion that a ring of dust
surrounds planets such as Earth and Venus, more or less tracing the
positions of the Lagrangian points," says van Leeuwen. And Nigel Hambly,
a Gaia scientist based at the University of Edinburgh, UK, suspects
that the dust is leftover material from the formation of moons and
planets.
The micrometeoroid find is of particular interest to scientists working on NASA's James Webb Space Telescope
(JWST). The infrared observatory will head to L2 in 2018 to study a
cornucopia of cosmic mysteries, and micrometeoroid impacts have the
potential to decrease the reflectivity of the telescope's enormous,
exposed mirror.
JWST scientist Mark Clampin
at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, says he and
his colleagues have been talking to the Gaia team and will now assess
whether the findings differ from their computer predictions of what to
expect at L2.
"JWST currently uses a NASA model for the
L2 environments, which includes micrometeoroids, so we need to be able
to compare the new Gaia results to that model," he says.
No comments:
Post a Comment