Media Information

 
 
 
Collection:
NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Collection
Name of Image:
Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory
Full Description:
This photograph shows the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (GRO) being deployed by the Remote Manipulator System (RMS) arm aboard the Space Shuttle Atlantis during the STS-37 mission in April 1991. The GRO reentered Earth atmosphere and ended its successful mission in June 2000. For nearly 9 years, the GRO Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE), designed and built by the Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC), kept an unblinking watch on the universe to alert scientists to the invisible, mysterious gamma-ray bursts that had puzzled them for decades. By studying gamma-rays from objects like black holes, pulsars, quasars, neutron stars, and other exotic objects, scientists could discover clues to the birth, evolution, and death of stars, galaxies, and the universe. The gamma-ray instrument was one of four major science instruments aboard the Compton. It consisted of eight detectors, or modules, located at each corner of the rectangular satellite to simultaneously scan the entire universe for bursts of gamma-rays ranging in duration from fractions of a second to minutes. In January 1999, the instrument, via the Internet, cued a computer-controlled telescope at Las Alamos National Laboratory in Los Alamos, New Mexico, within 20 seconds of registering a burst. With this capability, the gamma-ray experiment came to serve as a gamma-ray burst alert for the Hubble Space Telescope, the Chandra X-Ray Observatory, and major gound-based observatories around the world. Thirty-seven universities, observatories, and NASA centers in 19 states, and 11 more institutions in Europe and Russia, participated in the BATSE science program.
Date of Image:
1991-04-01
term:
STS-37
term:
Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory
term:
GRO
term:
Burst and Transient Source Experiment
term:
BATSE
facet_what:
Earth
facet_what:
Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory
facet_what:
Space Shuttle Orbiter
facet_what:
Chandra X-Ray Observatory (CXO)
facet_what:
Hubble Space Telescope (HST)
facet_what:
Launch Abort System (LAS)
facet_where:
Russia
facet_where:
New Mexico
facet_where:
Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC)
facet_when:
April 1991
facet_when:
June 2000
facet_when:
January 1999
facet_when_year:
1999
facet_when_year:
1991
facet_when_year:
2000
Reference Number:
MSFC-75-SA-4105-2C
MIX #:
0003356
NIX #:
MSFC-0003356
MSFC Negative Number:
0003356
UID:
SPD-MARSH-0003356
original url: