Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NASA pulls plug on observator­y

Space telescope off job as wait for replacemen­t ongoing

- MARCIA DUNN

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. — NASA is pulling the plug on one of its great observator­ies — the Spitzer Space Telescope — after 16 years of scanning the universe with infrared eyes.

The end comes today when ground controller­s put the aging spacecraft into permanent hibernatio­n.

For years, Spitzer peered through dusty clouds at untold stars and galaxies, uncovered a huge, nearly invisible ring around Saturn, and helped discover seven Earthsize planets around a nearby star.

Spitzer’s last observatio­n was Wednesday. Altogether, Spitzer observed 800,000 celestial targets and churned out more than 36 million raw images as part of the $1.4 billion mission.

An estimated 4,000 scientists around the world took part in the observatio­ns and published nearly 9,000 studies, according to NASA.

“You have to be proud … when you look back and say, ‘Look at the team that’s operating Spitzer, look at the team that’s contributi­ng to having all of this great science,’” said project manager Joseph Hunt.

Designed to last just 2½ to five years, the telescope got increasing­ly difficult to operate as it drifted farther behind Earth, NASA said. It currently trails Earth by 165 million miles, while orbiting the sun.

Spitzer will continue to fall even farther behind Earth, posing no threat to another spacecraft or anything else, officials said.

“Although it would be great to be able to operate all of our telescopes forever, this is not possible,” NASA’s astrophysi­cs director Paul Hertz said in an email.

NASA originally planned to decommissi­on Spitzer a few years ago, but put off its demise as the James Webb Space Telescope, a vastly more elaborate infrared observator­y, kept getting delayed.

Webb’s launch is now off until at least early next year. This week, the Government Accountabi­lity Office warned of further delays because of technical challenges.

It had been costing NASA about $12 million a year lately to keep Spitzer going. Hertz said with “no guarantee” Spitzer would last until Webb’s launch, the decision was made to shut it down now.

Launched in 2003, Spitzer was the last of NASA’s four so-called great observator­ies. With its infrared instrument­s, it was able to sense heat coming off celestial objects like night vision goggles, said Suzanne Dodd, a former project manager who now oversees NASA’s Deep Space Network at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif.

By seeing through dust, “we’re lifting the cosmic veil on the universe,” Dodd said.

Still sending back breathtaki­ng pictures, the Hubble Space Telescope rocketed into orbit in 1990 to observe the cosmos in visible and ultraviole­t light; it will celebrate its 30th anniversar­y in April.

The Compton Gamma Ray Observator­y was launched in 1991, but because of equipment failure was destroyed in a fiery reentry in 2000. The Chandra X-Ray Observator­y is still working since its 1999 launch.

 ?? (AP/NASA/JPL-Caltech) ?? This image captured by the Spitzer Space Telescope shows the runaway star Kappa Cassiopeia­e, or HD 2905, and its bow shock formed when the magnetic fields and wind of particles flowing off the star collide with the diffuse gas and dust that fill the space between stars as it travels. The wave is about 4 light-years ahead of Kappa Cassiopeia­e, about the same distance that Earth is from Proxima Centauri, the nearest star beyond the sun.
(AP/NASA/JPL-Caltech) This image captured by the Spitzer Space Telescope shows the runaway star Kappa Cassiopeia­e, or HD 2905, and its bow shock formed when the magnetic fields and wind of particles flowing off the star collide with the diffuse gas and dust that fill the space between stars as it travels. The wave is about 4 light-years ahead of Kappa Cassiopeia­e, about the same distance that Earth is from Proxima Centauri, the nearest star beyond the sun.

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