Space Travel News  
Herschel Telescope Flight Model At ESTEC

Telescope incoming inspection.
by Staff Writers
Paris, France (ESA) Feb 04, 2008
The Herschel telescope's primary mirror is the largest mirror ever built for space. It is made out of 12 silicon carbide (SiC) petals brazed together and coated with a thin aluminium reflective layer. The SiC provides a rigid but lightweight structure with the telescope mass totalling at about 320 kg.

In the morning on Friday 18 January, the flight model of the 3.5-metre diameter telescope arrived at ESTEC in Noordwijk on its transporter truck.

Upon arrival the outside of the telescope container was first cleaned before the transport was turned to cleanroom loading bay-airlock #3 for unloading of the container holding the large telescope.

On 24 January, the unpacking of the telescope was performed in the cleanroom, starting with the lifting of the transport container cover. The images below show the telescope - still with a white protective cover - being hoisted from its transport stand onto its ground handling system.

In the following days a thorough inspection of the telescope's condition after transport was performed - the telescope incoming inspection. The mirrors were inspected after removal of the telescope's protective cover.

The next major milestones for the telescope will be a fit-check of the telescope's interface with the spacecraft on a reference plate (simulating the actual spacecraft interface) and the M1/M2 distance measurement of the telescope's primary and secondary mirror.

Eventually the telescope will be integrated on top of the Herschel cryostat vacuum vessel that is currently set up for its cooldown and filling of the cooling system with liquid helium.

Related Links
Herschel telescope's
Space Telescope News and Technology at Skynightly.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


International Team Establishes Unique Observatory In Antarctica
Dome Argus, Antarctica (SPX) Feb 04, 2008
A team of scientists representing six international institutions, including Texas A and M University, has succeeded in reaching the summit of Antarctica - also a monumental achievement for ground-based astronomy -- to establish a new astronomical observatory at Dome Argus on the highest point of the Antarctic Plateau.







  • Companies Team Up For Advanced Airbag Landing And Flotation System For Orion Vehicle
  • Russia May Build New Shuttle Spacecraft By 2015
  • SPACEX Conducts First Multi-Engine Firing Of Falcon 9 Rocket
  • Virgin's Branson presents new space ship

  • Khrunichev Center Signs New Contract For Proton-M Launches
  • ILS To Launch Yahsat Satellite On Proton
  • TEXUS Research Rockets To Launch On 31 January And 7 February 2008
  • Russian space center to launch boosters

  • Columbus Set For February 7 Launch Aboard Atlantis
  • Shuttle Atlantis due to launch February 7
  • NASA to televise Columbia remembrance
  • Shuttle Tank Connector Repairs Stretch Boundaries

  • ISS astronauts repair solar array during 7-hr spacewalk
  • Crew Oxygen For ISS Loaded On Jules Verne
  • Station Crew Ready For Wednesday's Spacewalk
  • Europe sets launch window for maiden mission of space freighter

  • India, U.S. sign space agreement
  • Beatles song directed into deep space
  • NASA Issues Environmental Impact Statement For Constellation
  • NASA Uses Vertical Treadmill To Improve Astronaut Health In Space

  • China May Broadcast First Taikonaut Spacewalk Live
  • Chinese Taikonaut Dismisses Environment Worries About New Space Launch Center
  • China To Boost Civil Industrialization With Xian Base
  • China Set To Launch Manned Space Mission In 2008

  • Meet Blob The Robot
  • Russian Fuel Flows Into Jules Verne Automated Transfer Vehicle
  • ESA Training Team ATV
  • Honda's ASIMO robot gets smarter

  • Mars In Their Sights
  • Lyell Panorama Inside Victoria Crater Mars Four Years On Mars
  • Traces Of The Martian Past In The Terby Crater
  • HiRISE Camera Details Dynamic Wind Action On Mars

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement