Документ взят из кэша поисковой машины. Адрес оригинального документа : http://www.astrosociety.org/pubs/mercury/31_03/sirtf.html
Дата изменения: Sat Apr 21 00:02:40 2012
Дата индексирования: Tue Oct 2 02:44:26 2012
Кодировка:

Поисковые слова: метеоритика
ASP: SIRTF: NASA’s Next Great Observatory AstroShop Support Resources Education Events Publications Membership News About Us Home
The Astronomical Society of the Pacific

 

   home > publications > mercury

SEARCH ASP SITE:
 

Publications Topics:

 

Books

 

ASP Conference Series

 

Monograph Publications

 

IAU Publications

 

 

Books of Note

 

 

Purchase through the AstroShop

 

Journals

 

 

Publications of the ASP (PASP)

 

Magazines

 

Mercury Magazine

 
   

Archive

 
   

Guidelines for Authors

 
   

Order Mercury Issues

 
   

Mercury Advertising Rates

 
 
 

Newletters

 

The Universe in the Classroom

 

 

ASP E-mail Newsletters

 

Special Features

 

 

Astronomy Beat

 

Contact Us

 
SIRTF: NASA’s Next Great Observatory  

Mercury, May/June 2002 Table of Contents

by Michelle Thaller

Infrared astronomy is truly coming of age. Many of NASA’s most important and ambitious upcoming missions, including SOFIA, the Next Generation Space Telescope, and Terrestrial Planet Finder, feature infrared telescopes, so the stage is being set for infrared science to play a leading role in the study of the universe for the coming decades.

The next major infrared mission is the Space Infrared Telescope Facility (SIRTF), a cryogenic space telescope set to launch in early 2003. SIRTF was originally conceived to be the fourth and final installment of NASA’s Great Observatories, a fleet of space telescopes designed to give astronomers a view of the universe across the entire electromagnetic spectrum. With the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory having completed its mission, and with the other two Great Observatories (Hubble and Chandra) still in place, SIRTF stands poised not just to round out the program, but also to connect that program solidly into NASA’s new initiative, the search for humanity’s cosmic origins.

 
 

home | about us | news | membership | publications

events | education | resources | support | astroshop | search


Privacy & Legal Statements | Site Index | Contact Us

Copyright ©2001-2012 Astronomical Society of the Pacific