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Spitzer Space Telescope
DECEMBER 2005
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Spitzer Space Telescope @ National Geographic Magazine
By Bill Douthitt
Image by NASA/JPL/Caltech/Lori Allen and Joseph Hora,
Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics
The Spitzer Space Telescope keeps a keen eye out for cosmic birthplaces, where stars are blazing to life and new planets are forged.

Get a taste of what awaits you in print from this compelling excerpt.

There's a lot hiding in the universe's dark corners. Interstellar dust clouds and inky stretches of deep space can appear dull to ordinary telescopes. But to a car-size telescope 26 million miles (42 million kilometers) from Earth, they are alive with light—infrared light, or heat rays. Since its launch in August 2003, says Robert Kennicutt, an astronomer at the University of Arizona, NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope "has opened up half the universe to us."
 
In the process, it has exposed cosmic birthplaces. Stars take shape in clouds of gas and dust, and planets emerge in disks of debris around new stars. Early galaxies are also swathed in dust. Little visible light gets out, but these objects still emit heat—and infrared.

Get the whole story in the pages of National Geographic magazine.


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