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New Image of Earth, Seen through Gamma-Ray Eyes
Media Contact:
Susan Hendrix
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
Susan.M.Hendrix@nasa.gov
301-286-7745
issued by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
March 25, 2005 Greenbelt, MD -- A NASA-funded scientist has produced a new type of picture of the Earth
from space, which complements the familiar image of our "blue marble".
This new picture is the first detailed image of our planet radiating gamma
rays, a type of light that is millions to billions of times more energetic
than visible light.
The image portrays how the Earth is constantly bombarded by particles from
space. These particles, called cosmic rays, hit our atmosphere and produce
the gamma-ray light high above the Earth. The atmosphere blocks harmful
cosmic rays and other high-energy radiation from reaching us on the
Earth's surface.
"If our eyes could see high-energy gamma rays, this is what the Earth
would look like from space," said Dr. Dirk Petry of NASA Goddard Space
Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md. "Other planets -- most famously, Jupiter
-- have a gamma-ray glow, but they are too far away from us to image in
any detail."
Petry assembled this image from seven years of data from NASA's Compton
Gamma-Ray Observatory, which was active from 1991 to 2000. The Compton
Observatory orbited the Earth at an average altitude of about 260 miles
(420 km). From this distance, the Earth appears as a huge disk with an
angular diameter of 140 degrees. The long exposure and close distance
enabled Petry to produce a gamma-ray image of surprisingly high detail.
"This is essentially a seven-year exposure," Petry said.
The gamma rays produced in the Earth's atmosphere were detected by
Compton's EGRET instrument, short for Energetic Gamma-Ray Experiment
Telescope. In fact, 60 percent of the gamma rays detected by EGRET were
from Earth and not deep space. Although it makes a pretty image, local
gamma-ray production interferes with observations of distant gamma-ray
sources, such as black holes, pulsars, and supernova remnants.
Petry created this gamma-ray Earth image to better understand the impact
of "local" cosmic-ray and gamma-ray interactions on an upcoming NASA
mission called GLAST, the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope. GLAST is
planned for launch in 2007. Its main instrument, the Large Area Telescope,
is essentially EGRET's successor.
In 1972 and 1973 the NASA satellite SAS-II captured the first resolved
image of the Earth in gamma rays, but the detectors had less exposure time
(a few months) and worse energy resolution.
Petry, a member of the GLAST team at NASA Goddard, is an assistant
research professor at the Joint Center for Astrophysics of the University
of Maryland, Baltimore Country.
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