YAHOO.COM - A giant helium balloon is slowly drifting above Antarctica, about 22 miles (36 kilometers) up. Launched on Tuesday (Dec. 25) from the National Science Foundation's
Long Duration Balloon (LDB) facility on Earth's southernmost continent,
it carries a sensitive telescope that measures submillimeter light
waves from stellar nurseries in our Milky Way.
"Christmas launch!" wrote officials with NASA's Wallops Flight Facility, which oversees the agency's balloon research program, in a Twitter post yesterday. "BLAST launched today from McMurdo Station, Antarctica."
This is the fifth and final mission for BLAST, short for the Balloon-borne Large-Aperture Submillimeter Telescope, and mission designers hope it will reveal why so few stars are born in our galaxy.
On Dec. 12, BLAST was still in one of the two giant Payload Assembly
Buildings at the LDB facility, a short distance from the U.S. research
center McMurdo Station. Principal investigator Mark Devlin
of the University of Pennsylvania and a group of graduate students were
mounting a giant sunshade on the telescope, to ensure that the
ultra-cold detectors won't heat up during the flight.
"The detectors are cooled to 0.3 degrees aboven absolute zero, using
liquid helium," said Devlin. "If they were any warmer, they wouldn't be
able to register the faint submillimeter radiation of cold interstellar dust clouds at just 30 degrees above absolute zero."
Star mystery
After test flights in 2003 in New Mexico and in 2005 in Sweden, BLAST's third flight, in 2006 from Antarctica,
was a "mind-boggling" success, Devlin said. The instrument revealed
beyond doubt that in most distant galaxies, new stars are born at a
prolific rate. By measuring the star formation rate in galaxies more
than 7 billion light-years away, the researchers determined that over
half of the stars in the uuniverse were born within the first 5 billion
years after the Big Bang.
"But there's an unsolved problem," added co-principal investifator Barth Netterfield
of the University of Toronto, Canada, who was assisting the BLAST team
with the launch preparations. "BLAST found lots of so-called dark cores
in our own Milky Way
— dense clouds of cold dust that are supposed to be
stars-in-the-making. Based on the number of dark cores, you would expect
our galaxy to spawn dozens of new stars each year on average. Yet, the
galactic star formation rate is only some four solar masses per year."
So why is the stellar birth rate
in our Milky Way so low? Astronomers can think of two ways in which a
dense cloud of dust is prevented from further contracting into a star:
turbulence in the dust, or the collapse-impeding effects of magnetic
fields. On its new mission, BLAST should find out which process is to
blame. [Images: Life at Antarctica's Concordia Station]
The idea is straightforward: magnetic fields tend to align electrically
charged, elongated dust particles. If dust particles have a preferred
orientation, they will slightly polarize the submillimeter radiation
from the cloud. Using polarimeters, BLAST can detect if the radiation is
indeed polarized, and if it is, determine the direction of the magnetic
field. "If there's no polarization present," said Netterfield,
"turbulence must be the reason" why so few dark cores collapse into new
stars.
Final mission?
In 2010, on its fourth mission, BLAST was already equipped with
polarimeters. However, accdording to Devlin, "that flight did not do so
well because of a melted filter. We have some data, but we know we can
do better."
Luckily, repeating a balloon-borne experiment is much easier and much
cheaper than re-launching a scientific satellite. After each flight,
most of the payload is recovered and can be used again. In particular,
the BLAST camera with its sensitive and expensive detectors has been
recovered every single time.
BLAST's fifth flight will probably last between 12 and 14 days. While
Devlin, Netterfield and their colleagues are celebrating Christmans and
New Year's Eve, the 4,000-pound (1800 kilograms) stratospheric telescope
will observe selected star-forming regions in the constellations Vela
and Lupus.
And if senior graduate student Tristan Matthews of Northwestern
University Illinois has his way, this may not be BLAST's final mission
after all. Depending on the results and the recovery success of the
current flight, Matthews hopes to fly BLAST in its present configuration
for a sixth time, in the Arctic. "That would give us access to a
well-studied and nearby star-forming region in Taurus," he said.
Meanwhile, Devlin has received a $5 million grant from NASA over a
period of five years to develop a larger version of BLAST, with a
2.5-meter mirror, as compared to the current 1.8-meter aperture. That
would vastly increase the number of stellar nurseries that could be
studied. "We could fly SuperBLAST in 2016 or so," he said.