{"id":14038,"date":"2021-08-13T15:39:53","date_gmt":"2021-08-13T14:39:53","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=14038"},"modified":"2021-08-13T15:39:53","modified_gmt":"2021-08-13T14:39:53","slug":"the-gaia-mission-spacecraft-billion-stars-survey","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/the-gaia-mission-spacecraft-billion-stars-survey\/14038\/","title":{"rendered":"The Gaia Mission: one spacecraft, a billion stars to survey"},"content":{"rendered":"
The Gaia mission is creating a census of our Universe. Launched into space in 2013, it aims to survey over one thousand million stars across our Galaxy, carefully recording any changes alongside their movements and positions using spectrophotometric measurements. The data from this mission will provide a wide range of data that will allow us to further examine the origins, structure, and history of our galaxy. So far, the mission has yielded unprecedented results, with the discovery of the galaxy Antlia 2 and the Radcliffe wave, among others.<\/p>\n
Gaia\u2019s first releases brought the discovery of many new star streams, helped discover new clusters, and brought a deeper understanding of the historic events that shaped our Milky Way. But this is only the beginning! More data, more types of data, and more accurate data will follow, promising a true treasure chest for astronomers.<\/p>\n
Clifford Holt, International Editor for Innovation News Network<\/em>, spoke with Tineke Roegiers, HE Space Operations for the European Space Agency, about the Gaia mission and its ongoing impact.<\/p>\n Knowing where the stars are located and how they move is essential information. This information can disclose a lot about the galaxy now, its history, and its future. Hipparcos, the predecessor of the Gaia mission, created a map of 117,955 stars with a precision of 1 milli-arcsecond. Now, with Gaia\u2019s latest release, a map has been created of more than 1.8 billion stars with an even higher precision.<\/p>\n Gaia\u2019s catalogue contains the positions of the stars, but also a measure for their distance and how they move across the sky. You could consider Gaia to be a Milky Way cartographer. To know the position and motion of stars allows us to investigate the structures in our Milky Way, like, for example, star clusters and star streams \u2013 which stars move together in space and where are they heading or coming from. This information can also help disclose if stars, or streams and clusters, were disrupted along their way.<\/p>\n While Hipparcos was limited to a region around the Solar System, Gaia can see further, all the way to the disk of the Milky Way and (in the other direction) all the way into the halo.<\/p>\n On average, Gaia will observe a star 70 times over its nominal five-year mission. Gaia uses two optical telescopes that work with three science instruments and precisely determines the location of stars and their brightness, before splitting their light into a spectrum to obtain further data. After sending the raw data down to Earth, the data is extensively processed by a consortium of scientists and engineers to generate the scientific data products from all observations, which are shared with the community through data releases.<\/p>\n The spacecraft is designed to spin slowly and moves around the Sun in one year, allowing its two telescopes to cover the entirety of the celestial sphere.<\/p>\n The mission has a firm approved mission extension until the end of 2022, and a first indicative mission extension until the end of 2025. This means Gaia could be operating for more than 10 years, and thus observing stars on average more than 140 times.<\/p>\n Gaia will detect exoplanets through precise astrometric measurements of stars by observing the tiny wobble in the position and motion of the star caused by the movement of the exoplanet around its host star. Gaia will also detect exoplanets by observing small dips in the brightness of the star caused by the exoplanet moving in front of the host star and temporarily blocking the light coming from it. Small dips in the brightness can have other causes. For example, the star can be variable, or could be undergoing an explosion, or even be a double star. One of the challenges in the processing is to figure out what is causing this dip in brightness and how to classify the star in this respect. These classifications are one of the products of the Gaia mission.<\/p>\n Gaia helps to improve our knowledge on the Solar System in many ways. By providing good stellar positions and motions, the predictions of stellar occultations (the movement of an asteroid in front of a star as seen from Earth) have improved a lot, with more narrow predicted shadow paths on Earth (so the location where you could possibly see the star being occulted by the asteroid). Because these predicted shadow paths on Earth have significantly decreased in size, the chance of actually capturing the stellar occultation has increased. Stellar occultation observations allow us to learn a lot about the asteroid moving in front of the star, about its shape, but also if the asteroid has rings, for example.<\/p>\n The improved knowledge on stellar positions and motions is also used to reprocess images taken from asteroids years ago. The relative position of the asteroid in that image with respect to the stars can be computed more precisely because the position and motion of the stars as seen on that same image are now known a lot better. This improved knowledge of the asteroid\u2019s historic position (as obtained with our current improved knowledge of the stars) is then used to recompute the asteroid\u2019s orbit. This has been done for a lot of the near-earth asteroids and helps us to identify which asteroids are more or less dangerous to us here on Earth.<\/p>\n The improved orbits of the asteroids (as recomputed following the improved star knowledge from Gaia) are also important to allow observing the asteroid in the future knowing its orbit better improves the chance of observing the asteroid again, and each successful observation of the asteroid then improves the knowledge of its orbit.<\/p>\n In addition to helping out with star data, Gaia, also observes asteroids directly. Gaia Data Release 2 already contains 14,099 asteroids1 <\/sup>and Gaia Data Release 3 is expected to contain about 150,000 asteroids.<\/p>\n Gaia is an all-sky survey mission, and hence can also observe asteroids in the regions which are not extensively observed by ground-based surveys, such as certain regions within the area between the Sun and the Earth.<\/p>\n In addition to observing known asteroids, Gaia has the potential of discovering new asteroids. A few already have been discovered including 2018 YK4, 2018 YL4 and 2018 YM4.<\/p>\nGaia\u2019s main objective is to conduct an astronomical census of 1 billion stars. Why is this important?<\/h3>\n
Gaia will also potentially detect between 10,000 and 50,000 planets beyond our Solar System. How will it do this?<\/h3>\n
Similarly, what will the mission\u2019s objectives concerning asteroids etc. help to achieve?<\/h3>\n