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IXPE Unfolds its Origami Boom for Science
by Jennifer Harbaugh
Huntsville AL (SPX) Dec 17, 2021

IXPE deploying in space before starting its science operations to study the cosmos.

NASA's newest X-ray observatory - the Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer, or IXPE - extended its boom successfully Dec. 15, giving IXPE the ability to see high-energy X-rays. The mission, which launched on Dec. 9, is one step closer to studying some of the most energetic and mysterious places in the universe in a new way.

The IXPE observatory features three identical telescopes, each with a mirror assembly and a polarization-sensitive detector. To focus X-rays, IXPE's mirrors need to be about 13 feet (4 meters) away from the detectors. That's too large to fit inside some rocket fairings. So IXPE's boom had to fold up, like origami, into a 12-inch (0.3-meter) cannister and stretch out again in orbit.

"For those of us in the space game, moving parts are always frightening," said Martin Weisskopf, IXPE's principal investigator at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center. "Right now, I'm smiling from ear to ear."

With the boom now deployed, mission specialists are ready to focus on commissioning the telescopes, preparing them for the spacecraft's first science.


Related Links
0Imaging X-ray Polarimetry Explorer, or IXPE
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
Webb space telescope launch delayed: NASA
Kourou (AFP) Dec 15, 2021
The launch of the James Webb space telescope scheduled for December 22 won't take place before December 24, NASA announced on Wednesday. The NASA project, launched in 1989, was originally expected to deploy in the early 2000s. But multiple problems forced delays and a tripling of the telescope's original budget with a final price tag of nearly 10 billion dollars (8.8 billion euros). Webb was built in the US and transported to its launch site in Kourou in French Guyana this year, where its la ... read more

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