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NASA announces plans to study the cosmos with a high-flying balloon

NASA announced a new method which it will be using to better study newly-formed stars: a stratospheric balloon floating 24.6 miles above the Earth's surface.

  (Agence France-Presse)
Sun, July 26, 2020

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NASA announces plans to study the cosmos with a high-flying balloon This illustration shows a high-altitude balloon ascending into the upper atmosphere. (NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center Conceptual Image Lab/Michael Lentz)

O

n Thursday, NASA announced a new method which it will be using to better study newly-formed stars: a stratospheric balloon floating 24.6 miles above the Earth's surface.

In just three short years, NASA will be sending a balloon 24.6 miles into the stratosphere above Antarctica that will serve as a tool to better study the cosmos, more specifically newly-formed stars, and even more specifically, the gas surrounding such astronomical objects. 

This football field-sized balloon will actually be carrying an 8.4-foot telescope called ASTHROS (Astrophysics Stratospheric Telescope for High Spectral Resolution Observations at Submillimeter-wavelengths) which "observes far-infrared light, or light with wavelengths much longer than what is visible to the human eye."

Read also: NASA is making new rules to prevent space from being contaminated with Earth germs

During this mission, ASTHROS will record the movements of gases around newly-formed stars in four main regions of space, a pair of which are located within the Milky Way Galaxy. These recordings will be the "first detailed 3D maps of the density, speed, and motion of gas in these regions to see how the newborn giants influence their placental material."

When this mission is complete, the telescope will slowly fall to the ground via a parachute.

As of right now, the launch of this project is scheduled for December 2023.

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