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Wash U astrophysicists to fly a balloon to get a view of black holes

Washington University team (from left to right): electrical engineer Paul Dowkontt, graduate student Banafsheh Beheshtipour, and professors Krawczynski and Kislat) in the Fort Sumner NASA station in front of the X-Ray telescope.
Washington University team (from left to right): electrical engineer Paul Dowkontt, graduate student Banafsheh Beheshtipour, and professors Krawczynski and Kislat) in the Fort Sumner NASA station in front of the X-Ray telescope.

A giant balloon will soon provide scientists at Washington University in St. Louis a view of black holes in the Milky Way galaxy.

Researchers will launch the 40 million cubic foot unmanned balloon, carrying an X-Ray telescope named X-Calibur, this month from NASA’s Columbia Scientific Balloon Facility in Fort Sumner, N.M. The payload will ascend 126,000 feet into the stratosphere, which is about four times the cruising altitude of commercial airplanes.

The telescope will spend 20 to 30 hours in the air pointing in the direction of two black holes and two neutron stars, which are the collapsed cores of large stars. Such extreme objects emit X-Ray light and in order to detect them, the balloon must reach a level of the atmosphere that doesn’t absorb most of the radiation that comes to Earth.

Washington University astrophysics professor Henric Krawczynski wants to gain a deeper understanding of how black holes consume matter in the universe.

“It is an interesting topic if you want to understand how galaxies evolve,” he said.

Black holes are formed by collapsed supermassive stars and exist in the center of galaxies. With the telescope, the team from Washington University hopes to study some of the activity that happens as matter enters a black hole.

“Before going into the black hole, [matter] goes around the black hole, like water goes down the drain, it kind of swirls in the sink,” Krawczynski said.

Researchers also attempted the mission two years ago, but a failure in the technology used to point the telescope in the direction of the black holes prevented it from going forward.

“The telescope has to point at the celestial object, the black hole, with an accuracy of roughly 100th of a degree, so we have to point very precisely,” Krawczynski said.

In 2014, the team relied on new technology from the Goddard Space Flight Center, in which the telescope sat on a high-pressure ball. Unfortunately, the setup could not precisely aim in the direction of the black holes the researchers wanted to observe.

Krawczynski has more confidence this time in using a pointing system developed by the Wallops Flight Facility, which involves a system of motors.

 

Copyright 2016 St. Louis Public Radio

Eli Chen is the science and environment reporter at St. Louis Public Radio. She comes to St. Louis after covering the eroding Delaware coast, bat-friendly wind turbine technology, mouse love songs and various science stories for Delaware Public Media/WDDE-FM. Before that, she corralled robots and citizen scientists for the World Science Festival in New York City and spent a brief stint booking guests for Science Friday’s live events in 2013. Eli grew up in the northwest suburbs of Chicago, where a mixture of teen angst, a love for Ray Bradbury novels and the growing awareness about climate change propelled her to become the science storyteller she is today. When not working, Eli enjoys a solid bike ride, collects classic disco, watches standup comedy and is often found cuddling other people’s dogs. She has a bachelor’s in environmental sustainability and creative writing at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and has a master’s degree in journalism, with a focus on science reporting, from the City University of New York Graduate School of Journalism.