SOFIA Explores the Southern Sky in New Zealand

July 18, 2013, Nr. 55

University of Stuttgart supports the telescope operation

For the first time SOFIA, the "Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy", has been deployed to the southern hemisphere. Based at the airport of Christchurch, New Zealand for three weeks, SOFIA has started to study celestial objects that are uniquely observable on southern flight routes. On the morning of July 18 New Zealand time, SOFIA landed after the first of its planned 9 science flights that included studies of the Magellanic Clouds, neighbours to the Milky Way galaxy, and of the circumnuclear disk orbiting the black hole in the center of our Galaxy. The German SOFIA Institute (DSI) of the University of Stuttgart manages the mission operations and scientific observations for SOFIA’s German partners.

A team of 13 DSI telescope experts will support the observatory’s first southern deployment. The GREAT (German Receiver for Astronomy at Terahertz Frequencies) instrument will be mounted on the telescope for spectroscopic investigations during the entire deployment. As a joint project between NASA and the German Aerospace Center (Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt, DLR), SOFIA carries a telescope with an effective diameter of 2.7 meters in a modified Boeing 747SP aircraft and is thus the world's largest airborne observatory. SOFIA flies at altitudes as high as 13,700 meters to provide access to astronomical signals at far-infrared wavelengths that would otherwise be blocked due to absorption by water vapor in the atmosphere.

On July 12 the airplane flew from its usual home at Palmdale, Calif., via Hawaii, to Christchurch, New Zealand. Here the US National Science Foundation has a base for its Antarctica programme, where SOFIA will be stationed until August 2. The scientific targets for the southern deployment of SOFIA include the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, as well as objects in the central regions of the Milky Way. The two Magellanic Clouds, dwarf galaxies in the close neighbourhood of our Galaxy, are easily visible with the naked eye in the southern sky. They are named after explorer Ferdinand Magellan, one of the first Europeans to report seeing them. Their relative proximity of 163.000 and 209.000 light years, respectively, allows detailed investigation of the stellar life cycles, from protostars to supernova remnants. Sites of prominent star formation will be studied during the deployment - sites well known from optical studies but barely explored at far-infrared wavelengths. For a number of science objectives the telescope will be pointing at the Milky Way’s center, which is much better and longer accessible from the southern hemisphere than from the north.

“The more than 30 publications of scientific results from the first observing campaigns with SOFIA’s first generation of instruments, GREAT and (U.S.) FORCAST, in 2011 in the northern hemisphere have already demonstrated the tremendous scientific potential of this observatory,” said Alois Himmes, DLR’s SOFIA program manager. “The current (and future) deployments to New Zealand will expand this potential substantially,” he added.

A mixed crew of scientists, technicians, and engineers from the U.S. and Germany plus two shifts of NASA pilots will operate SOFIA while based in New Zealand.13 colleagues from the DSI of the University of Stuttgart will support the observatory’s first southern deployment with their expertise regarding the telescope assembly. “We plan to conduct up to three scientific flights per week and the telescope has to always prove it’s remarkable performance” explains Holger Jakob, head of the DSI telescope team. “Given the great distance to our home base in Palmdale it is an everyday challenge to reach that goal.”

The high spectral resolving power of the GREAT instrument is designed for studies of the interstellar gas and the stellar life cycle, from a protostar’s early embryonic phase when still embedded in its parental cloud, to an evolved star’s death when the stellar envelope is ejected back into space.
“The GREAT success to address new exiting science at far-infrared wavelengths has been demonstrated during SOFIA’s earlier, northern hemisphere science flights. Now we are turning the instrument to new frontiers such as the Magellanic Clouds, which are relatively deficient in heavy elements, including the Tarantula nebula (also known as 30 Doradus), the most active starburst known in the Local Group of Galaxies”, said Rolf Guesten (Max-Planck-Institute for Radio Astronomy), leader of the group of German researchers who developed GREAT.

“SOFIA’s first deployment to the southern hemisphere is based on the intense and close collaboration between all participating U.S. and German partners”, says DSI Director Alfred Krabbe, professor of Airborne Astronomy and Extraterrestrial Space Missions at the University of Stuttgart. “This is just the first of a series of scheduled SOFIA scientific deployments envisioned over the course of the mission’s planned 20-year lifetime”, he adds.
 

Night sky at the southern hemisphere, obtained at Cerro Paranal in the Chilenian Atacama Desert showing stars and gas of the inner Milky Way and the Large and Small Magellanic Clouds, two dearf galaxies accompanying our Galaxy.. (Quelle: ESO/Y. Beletsky - http://www.eso.org/public/images/potw1119a/).

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SOFIA, the Stratospheric Observatory for Infrared Astronomy, is a joint project of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt e.V. (DLR; German Aerospace Centre, grant: 50OK0901). The German component of the SOFIA project is being carried out under the auspices of DLR, with funds provided by the Federal Ministry of Economics and Technology (Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Technologie; BMWi) under a resolution passed by the German Federal Parliament, and with funding from the State of Baden-Württemberg and the University of Stuttgart. Scientific operations are coordinated by the German SOFIA Institute (DSI) at the University of Stuttgart and the Universities Space Research Association (USRA) headquartered in Columbia, Maryland, U.S.A.

GREAT, the German Receiver for Astronomy at Terahertz Frequencies is a receiver for spectroscopic observations in the far infrared spectral regime at frequencies between 1.25 and 5 terahertz (wavelengths of 60 to 220 microns), which are not accessible from the ground due to absorption by water vapor in the atmosphere. GREAT is a first-generation German SOFIA instrument, developed by the Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy (MPIfR) and KOSMA at the University of Cologne, in collaboration with the Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research and the DLR Institute of Planetary Research. Rolf Guesten (MPIfR) is the principal investigator for GREAT. The development of the instrument was financed by the participating institutes, the Max Planck Society and the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft; DFG).

Contact:

German SOFIA Institute (DSI):

  • Dörte Mehlert,
    Point of contact for media
    Tel.: +49(0)711-685- 69632
    E-mail: mehlert [at] dsi.uni-stuttgart.de
     
  • Alfred Krabbe,
    Director of DSI, University of Stuttgart
    E-mail: krabbe [at] dsi.uni-stuttgart.de


University of Stuttgart
:

  • Andrea Mayer-Grenu,
    Dept. Communication
    Tel. +49(0)711/685-82176
    E-mail: andrea.mayer-grenu [at] hkom.uni-stuttgart.de


German Aerospace Center (DLR):

  • Elisabeth Mittelbach,
    Point of contact for media
    Tel.: +49(0)2203-601-2502
    E-mail: Elisabeth.Mittelbach [at] dlr.de
     
  • Alois Himmes
    Project manager SOFIA
    Tel.: +49(0)2203-601-2502
    E-mail: Alois Himmes [at] dlr.de


Max Planck Institute for Radio Astronomy, Bonn:

  • Norbert Junkes,
    Point of contact for media
    Tel: +49(0)228-525-399
    E-mail: njunkes [at] mpifr-bonn.mpg.de
     
  • Rolf Güsten,
    GREAT Principal Investigator
    E-mail: rguesten [at] mpifr-bonn.mpg.de
 
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