NuSTAR has been busy studying the most energetic phenomena in the universe.
Recently, a few high-energy events have sprung up, akin to "things that go bump
in the night." When one telescope catches a sudden outpouring of high-energy
light in the sky, NuSTAR and a host of other telescopes stop what they were
doing and take a better look.
For example, in early April, the blazar Markarian 421 had an episode of
extreme activity, brightening by more than 50 times its typical level. Blazars
are a special class of galaxies with accreting, or "feeding," supermassive black
holes at their centers. As the black holes feed, they light up, often ejecting
jets of material. When the jets are pointing toward Earth, they are called
blazars. By using telescopes sensitive to a range of energies to study how
blazars vary, astrophysicists gain insight into black hole feeding processes and
the physical conditions near the black hole.
NuSTAR got lucky in the case of Markarian 421, because it was already
observing the blazar at the time of its eruption, simultaneously with other
telescopes, including NASA's Fermi and Swift satellites. The flare-up was the
brightest ever observed for this object. In fact, it was so bright that NuSTAR
and other telescopes changed their observing cadence to spend more time studying
this galaxy. More on these findings will be available after the scientists have
analyzed the data and published papers.
Just a few weeks after this event, towards the end of April, NASA's Swift
satellite noticed the region around the center of our own Milky Way galaxy had
suddenly lit up. Flares lasting from a few minutes to three hours are not
uncommon for the black hole in the center of the Milky Way, known as Sagittarius
A*. In fact, NuSTAR observed such a flare last July.
However, this new event had lasted tens of hours and got the whole high-energy
community excited. NuSTAR was one of the first "on the scene," observing the
galactic center less than 50 hours after the initial Swift discovery. The NuSTAR
findings revealed that the brightening was due to a type of neutron star called
a magnetar, and not Sagittarius A* itself. The results were written up and
accepted in the Astrophysical Journal Letters.
Yet another event popped up in the sky just a few days later, surprising
astronomers. Swift found an extremely bright gamma-ray burst, brighter than any
event it had previously identified during its nearly 10 years in orbit. A
gamma-ray burst is a huge release of energy from a distant galaxy, thought to be
triggered by the collapse of a massive star.
The astronomical community, including NuSTAR, quickly reacted to the blast.
NuSTAR provided the first focused, high-quality observations of a gamma-ray
burst in high-energy X-rays.
Beginning in April, the NuSTAR spacecraft gained use of the Kongsberg
Satellite Services' Singapore tracking station for extra command uplinks and
data downlinks. The spacecraft's primary tracking coverage is provided by the
Italian Space Agency and uses antennas located in Malindi, Kenya, while data
uplinks are provided by NASA's Tracking and Data Relay Satellite System (TDRSS)
antennas. The back-up Singapore tracking station is helpful for periods when
additional coverage is needed either due to high data-rate targets, such as
bright objects, or when the Malindi antennas are unavailable. Additional
coverage has also been provided by the Universal Space Network's Hawaii antenna.
NuSTAR is a Small Explorer mission led by the California Institute of
Technology in Pasadena and managed by NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory, also in
Pasadena, for NASA's Science Mission Directorate in Washington.
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