News — Soaring at 41,000 feet in the air, a team of Ithaca College physics students and a professor recently took photos from a flying observatory to help discover what makes up our universe.
A collaboration between NASA and other researchers, the provides key insight into the formation and evolution of stars and planets. SOFIA allows scientists to observe infrared light and collect data鈥攕uch as never-before-seen images of Jupiter and the galaxy M82鈥攏early impossible to obtain previously.
SOFIA is made up of an eight-foot-wide, 17-ton telescope situated within a modified Boeing 747. While in flight, the cavity door of the plane opens, similar to a large garage door opening, to expose the giant telescope and capture images of space. A non-pressurized open area in the fuselage, or side of the plane, is then created to route the airflow over the telescope while the aircraft flies at 500 mph.
, Ithaca College associate professor of physics, is a member of the team assisting in the test flight series for the airborne telescope using an infrared camera system referred to as FORCAST (Faint Object Infrared Camera for the SOFIA Telescope).
鈥淎stronomers and physicists are constantly looking for better ways to view space and learn about our environment beyond Earth鈥檚 atmosphere,鈥 Keller says. 鈥淲ith SOFIA now in operation, we are going to see the universe in detail never before possible.鈥
Keller is responsible for developing and testing the software used in flight to process and analyze data, assisting with optical testing, and collaborating on the development of the camera鈥檚 calibration system.
The ability to image astronomical objects and environments at different infrared wavelengths enables Keller and his colleagues to analyze physical characteristics such as temperature and composition, thus allowing the scientists to watch dynamic processes taking place.
A total of 10 of Keller鈥檚 students made contributions to SOFIA. Three of those 10 also had a chance to experience a SOFIA flight. Two recently graduated in May with bachelor degrees in physics and the third student will graduate in December also with a bachelor degree in physics.
鈥 Casey Byrne helped the team prepare equipment, monitor software during the flight and observe real time data collection.
鈥 Rob Lewis developed software that he was able to see while analyzing data from a previous flight after the telescope鈥檚 low voltage issues restricted him from experiencing a flight on SOFIA.
鈥 Martin Garay MacLean set up at the FORCAST control center during his flight experience to test observing modes for light and radiation sources. MacLean saw data coming in real time and kept a list of possible upgrades to the software to work on as part of his summer research internship.
Over the next 20 years, additional instruments will be installed on the telescope, each one designed to investigate targeted infrared wavelengths and capture even more detail from space.
For more information on Ithaca College鈥檚 involvement with SOFIA and interview opportunities with Luke Keller and his students, contact Keith Davis.
SOFIA is a collaboration of NASA; the Deutsches Zentrum f眉r Luft und Raumfahrt, the German agency that designed and built the telescope; and teams of scientists and engineers at more than 30 universities, laboratories, and research centers.For more information on SOFIA, visit .
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From day one, Ithaca College prepares students for personal and professional success through hands-on experience with internships, research and study abroad. Its integrative curriculum builds bridges across disciplines and uniquely blends liberal arts and professional study. Located in New York鈥檚 Finger Lakes region, the College is home to 6,100 undergraduate and 400 graduate students and offers over 100 degree programs in its schools of Business, Communications, Humanities and Sciences, Health Science and Human Performance, and Music.