After 16 years and five months in space, NASA’s Spitzer Space Telescope is signing
off.
On January 30, engineers will instruct the telescope to
power down, bringing an end to one of NASA’s premier orbiting observatories.
The telescope’s infrared vision witnessed the births and deaths of stars, charted
the Milky Way, found worlds orbiting other suns, spied on comets and planets in
our solar system and sought out galaxies in the farthest reaches of the cosmos.
Much of the universe hides behind dust that blocks visible
starlight from reaching our eyes. Spitzer’s goal was to knock down those walls.
Its detectors are sensitive to infrared light that can penetrate clouds of dust
and reveal what lurks beyond.
“We’re lifting the cosmic veil on the universe,” said former
mission manager Suzanne Dodd, a spacecraft operations expert at the Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., at a January 22 NASA TV broadcast reflecting
on Spitzer’s accomplishments.
Spitzer launched on August 25, 2003, into an orbit where it trails Earth around the sun (SN: 12/17/03). Named in honor of the late astrophysicist Lyman Spitzer, Jr. — who, in 1946, first proposed putting telescopes in space — the mission originally was planned to operate for just 2½ years. After nearly six years, the telescope ran out of liquid helium needed to keep its instruments ultracold. Spitzer soldiered on, running some of its instruments at a slightly degraded capacity.
“I never had any conception that we would go for 16 years,”
said mission scientist Michael Werner, also at JPL, during the same broadcast.
But every day, Spitzer gets farther from home, as a result
of the orbit that the satellite is on. At nearly 270 million kilometers from
Earth, “it’s becoming more difficult to communicate with the telescope,” said
Paul Hertz, director of NASA’s astrophysics division. The space agency also
wants to free up resources for its next infrared observatory, the James Webb Space Telescope, scheduled to
launch in 2021, Hertz said.
As Spitzer’s mission comes to a close, here’s a look back at
some of its images and accomplishments, presented roughly by increasing
distance from Earth.
A new ring for saturn
Saturn already is famous for its gleaming rings. But in
2009, Spitzer first spied the feeble infrared glow of a
much larger, tenuous ring encircling the planet (SN: 10/6/09). The
ring is 40 times as thick as Saturn and spans a distance over 200 times as wide
as the planet itself. The hula hoop of dust appears to be fed by debris knocked off of the moon
Phoebe by a steady rain of interplanetary rocks.
A septet of earth-sized worlds
Nearly 40 light-years away, seven
Earth-sized planets orbit a dim red star dubbed TRAPPIST-1 — and Spitzer
found most of them (SN: 2/22/17). In 2017, astronomers announced
that data from Spitzer (with help from observatories on the ground) confirmed two suspected planets and
uncovered five more, three of which may be warm enough for liquid water,
considered essential for life.
“It’s the best characterized solar system outside of our
own,” Werner said.
The TRAPPIST-1 system was not Spitzer’s first foray into
exoplanet research. In 2005, the telescope made the first detection of infrared light
from planets orbiting other stars. Two years later, astronomers used Spitzer data
to create the first
temperature map of an entire exoplanet’s
atmosphere.
Catching a shooting star
The star Zeta Ophiuchi, about 370 light-years from Earth, is
rocketing through space at nearly 90,000 kilometers per hour. In 2012, Spitzer
snapped a series of pictures to create a
composite image of this speedy star. Like a boat plowing through water, the
star is creating a “bow shock” in the surrounding dust. But unlike a boat, this
bow shock is carved out by stellar winds — a steady stream of charged particles
from Zeta Ophiuchi — colliding with gas and dust roughly half a light-year
ahead of the star.
Witnessing the birth of stars
Stars are born in dusty cocoons that hide many details of their
formation from astronomers — unless they have an infrared telescope. Spitzer allowed
researchers to peer through the dust and into the hearts of stellar nurseries
throughout the galaxy. At roughly 400 light-years from Earth, the nebula Rho Ophiuchi is
one of the closest of these nurseries. With Spitzer, researchers could spy on several
hundred stars emerging from the cloud of gas and dust (SN: 2/13/08).
Some are still enshrouded in dust, out of which planets may form, while other
slightly older stars have shed their dusty cloaks.
Mapping our galaxy
Much of our galaxy is hidden behind thick lanes of
interstellar dust. But that dust was no match for Spitzer, which astronomers
used to create an expansive
360-degree infrared map of the Milky Way’s disk (SN: 5/5/14). Known
as GLIMPSE360, or the
Galactic Legacy Mid-Plane Survey Extraordinaire, the project required over
4,000 hours of telescope time spread across 10 years. With some coverage
provided by NASA’s WISE telescope,
another infrared observatory in space, the survey has allowed researchers to
map out the center of the galaxy, chart its outer limits, trace the Milky Way’s
spiral arms and better understand how often the galaxy churns out new stars.
The sombrero’s secret past
When viewed in visible light, the Sombrero galaxy presents a
dark outer ring of dust to observers on Earth. In infrared images, the dust
lights up the galaxy’s disk, allowing researchers to probe structural details
that might otherwise remain hidden. Spitzer images of Sombrero, which lies
about 28 million light-years away, revealed
that the disk is slightly warped, suggesting a close encounter with another
galaxy at some point in the past.
Later analysis of the Spitzer images showed that this galaxy
appears to be a hybrid, blending characteristics
of disklike galaxies and round elliptical galaxies. One explanation is that
perhaps Sombrero might once have been an elliptical galaxy — full of old stars
— that got inundated by gas from intergalactic space. The gas, locked in orbit
around the galaxy’s center, might have spun out into a flat disk where a new
generation of stars was born.
Gazing back in time
In 2005, astronomers were looking for missing quasars, blazing
cores of galaxies powered by voracious supermassive black holes. While some quasars
had been cataloged, there didn’t appear to be enough to account for a cosmic glow
of X-ray light that quasars likely produced. Turns out, they were just hiding.
Spitzer images uncovered a
cache of quasars lurking within dust-enshrouded centers of galaxies whose
light took roughly 10 billion years to reach Earth.
More recently, astronomers turned Spitzer’s gaze even farther away — and further back in time. In 2011, researchers used Spitzer — along with 11 other telescopes on the ground and in space — to discover the most distant protocluster of galaxies known at the time. Seen as it was just a billion years after the Big Bang, the gathering shows galaxies coming together to form the gargantuan clusters that exist today. And in 2016, astronomers combined the powers of Spitzer and the Hubble Space Telescope to identify what is still the most distant known galaxy. Dubbed GN-z11, its light left the galaxy when the universe, which has been around for 13.8 billion years, was only 400 million years old.