- Deaf Pakistani girl raped and forced to work for 10 years in Brit home
- Oz High Court allows Indian- origin doc Jayant Patel's manslaughter appeal
- Somalia-based terror group al Shabaab joins al-Qaeda
- US distances itself from congressional hearing over Balochistan issue
- Pakistan coveys its concerns to US over Senate hearing on 'internal' Balochistan issue
- Terror gang members to walk free following sentence reduction
NASA instrument to study matter in extreme environments of the universe
Washington, June 28 (ANI): An instrument to study the matter in extreme environments of the universe has been given the "green light" from NASA Headquarters, Washington.
Known as the High-Resolution Soft X-Ray Spectrometer (SXS), this instrument was one of the two science proposals recently selected by NASA for the Explorer Program Mission of Opportunity investigations, and is managed at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland.
The SXS was selected from among 17 proposals received by NASA earlier this year.
To be developed at Goddard, the SXS will be installed on the Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency's New exploration X-Ray Telescope, or NeXT.
The observatory, currently planned for launch in 2013, will open a new observing window on X-rays and the study of astrophysical phenomena.
"We are thrilled to have the opportunity to create a powerful new x-ray spectrometer that will open up a whole new realm in high energy astrophysics in collaboration with our partners in Japan," said Richard L. Kelley, the Principal Investigator for the SXS mission at Goddard.
The SXS will probe matter in extreme environments; investigate the nature of dark matter on large scales in the universe; and explore how galaxies and clusters of galaxies form and evolve. (ANI)
A mysterious woman on Mars in NASA's image.
NASA's intergalactic musical mission to awake aliens.
NASA spacecraft lands successfully on the red planet.
NASA's Cassini spacecraft to take a step closer to Titan and Enceladus.
NASA instrument to study matter in extreme environments of the universe.
|
|
|
|
|
|
Comments:








