For an Earth-orbiting gamma-ray telescope, Earth is actually the brightest
source of gamma-rays, the
most energetic form of light. Gamma-rays from Earth are produced
when high energy particles, cosmic rays from space, crash
into the atmosphere. While that interaction blocks harmful radiation from
reaching the surface, those gamma-rays dominate in this remarkable Earth and sky
view from the orbiting Fermi Gamma-ray
Space Telescope's Large Area Telescope. The image was constructed using only
observations made when the center of our Milky Way galaxy was near the zenith,
directly above the Fermi
satellite. The zenith is mapped to the center of the field. The Earth and
points near the nadir, directly below the satellite, are mapped to the edges of
the field resulting in an Earth and all-sky projection from Fermi's orbital
perspective. The color scheme shows low intensities of gamma-rays as blue and
high intensities as yellowish hues on a logarithmic scale. Our fair planet's brighter gamma-ray glow floods the
edges of field, the high intensity yellow ring tracing Earth's limb. Gamma-ray sources in the sky along the relatively faint
Milky Way stretch diagonally across the middle. Launched June 11, 2008 to explore the high-energy
Universe, this week Fermi celebrated its 2,000th day in low Earth orbit.
A place were I can write...
My simple blog of pictures of travel, friends, activities and the Universe we live in as we go slowly around the Sun.
December 06, 2013
Gamma
For an Earth-orbiting gamma-ray telescope, Earth is actually the brightest
source of gamma-rays, the
most energetic form of light. Gamma-rays from Earth are produced
when high energy particles, cosmic rays from space, crash
into the atmosphere. While that interaction blocks harmful radiation from
reaching the surface, those gamma-rays dominate in this remarkable Earth and sky
view from the orbiting Fermi Gamma-ray
Space Telescope's Large Area Telescope. The image was constructed using only
observations made when the center of our Milky Way galaxy was near the zenith,
directly above the Fermi
satellite. The zenith is mapped to the center of the field. The Earth and
points near the nadir, directly below the satellite, are mapped to the edges of
the field resulting in an Earth and all-sky projection from Fermi's orbital
perspective. The color scheme shows low intensities of gamma-rays as blue and
high intensities as yellowish hues on a logarithmic scale. Our fair planet's brighter gamma-ray glow floods the
edges of field, the high intensity yellow ring tracing Earth's limb. Gamma-ray sources in the sky along the relatively faint
Milky Way stretch diagonally across the middle. Launched June 11, 2008 to explore the high-energy
Universe, this week Fermi celebrated its 2,000th day in low Earth orbit.
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