Scientists know what the universe looked like when it was a baby. They know what it looks like today. What they don’t know is how it looked in its youth. Thanks to technological advances, however, scientists hope to complete the photo album and provide a picture of how the cosmos developed into the kind of place that could support life like that found on Earth.
They plan to gather these never-before-obtained insights with a potentially “game-changing” instrument that is expected to be 10,000 times more sensitive than the current state-of-the-art.
Video: Scientists may finally get a glimpse at our adolescent universe from a revolutionary new technology being developed at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center: An instrument on a chip called MicroSpec. This new instrument is a far-infrared spectrometer that will be 10,000 times more sensitive and many times smaller than similar existing devices. (Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center) Download other video formats from NASA Goddard’s Scientific Visualization Studio
The instrument is being designed to gather data of objects so distant from Earth that they no longer can be observed in visible light, only in the infrared bands of the electromagnetic spectrum. In particular, this instrument, called a spectrometer, will measure the properties of the infrared light to identify the object’s composition and other physical properties.
Just as impressive, the aptly named MicroSpec would be able to perform these highly sensitive observations from a very small platform — so small, in fact, that all its components would fit onto a silicon wafer measuring just four inches in diameter.
Now under development by engineers and scientists at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Md., the instrument is a strong contender for future flight missions in astrophysics and Earth science, said astrophysicist Harvey Moseley, who is leading the instrument-development effort. “It’s quite a new and, we think, revolutionary concept,” he said. “If we can prove it, everyone will want it.”
Stars to Hemoglobin
Although the technology could help answer a plethora of science questions, it is ideally suited for studying the evolution of the universe and by extension, humanity’s place in it.
Past NASA missions, including the Goddard-developed Cosmic Background Explorer and the Wilkinson Microwave Anistropy Probe, studied the infant universe. They gathered information about the primordial light created during the universe’s creation. Both detected tiny temperature differences, which pointed to density differences that ultimately gave rise to the first stars and galaxies formed 400,000 million years after the Big Bang.
However, scientists have yet to study these objects with great precision. They also have not studied light emitted by the life-sustaining elements created in these first stars and later distributed across the universe in stellar explosions.
“Right after the Big Bang, the only elements that were really present in any abundance were hydrogen and helium,” Moseley said. “The formation of stars and the nuclear reaction that took place inside these first stars have created essentially all the elements that constitute the things that we see around here — the carbon in our bodies and the iron and hemoglobin in our blood. All these elements were formed in the many generations of stars that have been born and have died since the Big Bang.”
By building an instrument like MicroSpec, and studying this specific era in the universe’s nearly 14-billion-year history, scientists will “get a very clear picture of how the universe developed into the kind of place that could support life like us,” Moseley added.
Unprecedented Instrument
Not only is the science unprecedented, so is the instrument, said Wen-Ting Hsieh, a Goddard Detector Development Laboratory engineer who has been working with Moseley since 2009 to advance the technology in preparation for a future mission. “The most important thing is it is small and it’s super-sensitive.”
In essence, Moseley, Hsieh, and their NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory and CalTech University collaborators have found a way to dramatically shrink the size of the instrument. Compared with traditional spectrometers, which typically are table sized, the entire MicroSpec package of components, including its detectors, optics, and filters, would all be arranged on a thin silicon wafer measuring about 400 microns in thickness — four times the width of a human hair — and four inches in diameter.
“The idea was to get everything closely integrated and you get devices that are higher performing,” said Carl Stahle, a Goddard technologist and the new business lead for the Instrument Systems and Technology Division at Goddard. And because the components are assembled on silicon, MicroSpec can be mass-produced, just like the silicon chips used in computers and other electronic equipment.
Therefore, NASA could produce multiple devices and assemble them as one compact instrument. In addition to providing increased sensitivity, MicroSpec would reduce the amount of time to observe objects in the sky because more light-detection capabilities would be built into the instrument. “The key is understanding what you can do on the silicon wafer. That’s your instrument on a chip,” Stahle explained.
Also contributing to MicroSpec’s increased sensitivity — estimated to be 10,000 times better than current state-of-the-art instruments — is the degree to which it would be cooled. To detect far infrared light, instruments must be cooled to frigid temperatures to prevent instrument-generated heat from swamping the faint infrared signal. Therefore, the colder the instrument, the better the signal it receives. Moseley and team plan to employ an advanced Goddard-developed cooling system that would chill MicroSpec to just a tenth of a degree above absolute zero (-459.67 degrees Fahrenheit).
The future looks good for MicroSpec, Stahle said. Its sensitivity and small size make it suitable for all types of missions, everything from large observatories, like the Hubble Space Telescope, to suborbital missions carried out on balloons and aircraft. “It’s very flexible, adaptable. Any time we can get a factor-of-10 improvement in power, mass, and volume, we think it’s great. But this instrument is promising orders of magnitude performance. That’s almost unheard of. I think anyone would say that’s extraordinary.”