Spitzer Space Telescope Releases First Images
jkleint writes "The fourth and final of NASA's Great Observatories, the Spitzer Space Telescope, has just released its first images. Spitzer sees in infrared, allowing it to look through the dust clouds that obscure visible light images like those taken by the ill-fated Hubble. Spitzer has already found hydrocarbon spectra--precursors to carbon-based life--in a galaxy 3.2 billion light years away. The article has a very good writeup outlining the telescope's mission and why space-based infrared imaging is important."
If I want to see images of uranus and black holes, I'll check goatse, thank you.
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"Just released" in this case means three months ago, of course.
And you can also go read the comments in the first Slashdot story released for this press release back in December.
Sure, there's a longer write-up, but the pictures weren't "just released".
Here's a brief bio on Lyman Spitzer, the "father" of space telescopes
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How significant are these hydrocarbon findings? Are similar spectrums detected in other places (eg. the rest of our Galaxy)?
The post is not entirely correct in that the image presented in the article is not the first image from Spitzer. The Images from Spitzer can be seen on CIT's Spitzer Space Telescope page. As you can see the first image was the 'aliveness test' image and the first scientifically useful image was that of the Dark Globule in IC 1396. Great images with links to the high-resolution versions.
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Must have been a republican that modded this down...