NASA Universe Profile picture
Jun 10, 2022 5 tweets 4 min read Read on X
This week in 2008, our Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope launched. Since then it has been our eyes on the gamma-ray sky! Follow this thread for some science highlights, and read more about Fermi and gamma rays in this Tumblr post: tmblr.co/Zz_Uqj2TjyFug #FermiFriday
Some of the universe’s brightest sources of light are black holes in the centers of galaxies! Black holes can turn galaxies into cosmic flashlights, and our Fermi telescope is helping us learn more about them: tmblr.co/Zz_Uqj2VhC7pa
Did you know our Milky Way galaxy is blowing bubbles? Two of them, each 25,000 light-years tall! They extend above and below the disk of the galaxy, like the two halves of an hourglass. We can’t see them, but our Fermi telescope can, in gamma-ray light: tmblr.co/Zz_Uqj2dMNkMX This is an image of the Fer...
In 2017 Fermi detected a powerful, short gamma-ray burst located 130 million light-years away. @NSF’s LIGO also detected gravitational waves from this pair of colliding neutron stars, kicking off a new era of coordinated gravity and light studies. More: tmblr.co/Zz_Uqj2R2ArnX
Thunderstorms are the most powerful natural particle accelerators on Earth! Our Fermi telescope has caught them producing gamma rays, the highest-energy form of light: tmblr.co/Zz_Uqj2WlJVzG

• • •

Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to force a refresh
 

Keep Current with NASA Universe

NASA Universe Profile picture

Stay in touch and get notified when new unrolls are available from this author!

Read all threads

This Thread may be Removed Anytime!

PDF

Twitter may remove this content at anytime! Save it as PDF for later use!

Try unrolling a thread yourself!

how to unroll video
  1. Follow @ThreadReaderApp to mention us!

  2. From a Twitter thread mention us with a keyword "unroll"
@threadreaderapp unroll

Practice here first or read more on our help page!

More from @NASAUniverse

Oct 4
Forty-five years ago this fall, our HEAO (High Energy Astronomy Observatory) 3 satellite blasted off to survey the high-energy sky. Its observations furthered our understanding of how the universe works and what it’s made of. Follow this thread for some highlights! 🧵 This photo shows the nighttime launch of an Atlas/Centaur rocket carrying the final High Energy Astronomy Observatory, HEAO 3, on Sept. 20, 1979. The white rocket, labeled “United States,” is barely off the ground at the center of the image, dramatically lit from below by the fiery glow of liftoff. To its right is scaffolding, nearly as tall as the rocket, with extensions that have just detached from the vehicle. Billowing white clouds fill the bottom left of the image. The photo is watermarked “Credit: NASA.”
Launched from Cape Canaveral on Sept. 20, 1979, HEAO 3 (known as HEAO C before launch) was the last in a series of @NASA spacecraft designed to study X-rays, gamma rays, and cosmic rays from intriguing sources observed for the first time in the 1950s and 60s. This illustration depicts three dark gray spacecraft in orbit above Earth, under the title “High Energy Astronomy Observatory.” Each satellite is labeled with its name. HEAO 1, near the top of the image, is roughly cylindrical with blocky hardware covering the side facing us. Shiny blue and gray solar panels attach to the top of its body as well as to its left end. Below and to its left, HEAO 2 is a horizontal cylinder that narrows at one end with circular and rectangular openings visible. Solar panels span the top of the satellite. HEAO 3, to its right, is much blockier than the other two,...
@NASA HEAO 3 studied interstellar magnetic fields, the distribution of interstellar matter, and processes within stars and catastrophic events that create chemical elements heavier than iron. These observations taught us new things about supernova remnants, distant galaxies, and more. This photograph shows HEAO 3 under assembly in a clean room. The spacecraft, near the center of the image, is a tall, boxy structure on a white, rolling base. Six shiny, blue solar panels are attached to the side facing the right of the image, and a thin, white panel extends vertically from its top. It is surrounded by various equipment and scaffolding in a mostly white-walled room. Gray filters line the wall to the left. HEAO 3 towers over four people in white lab coats and hair coverings standing beside it, and two more people stand on a tall, white mobile staircase behind it, looking at ...
Read 7 tweets
Aug 1
The Japanese-led XRISM (pronounced “crism”) telescope launched almost a year ago as part of a long collaboration between @JAXA_en and @NASA. XRISM focuses on the hottest regions, largest structures, and objects with the strongest gravity in the universe. go.nasa.gov/4d7BVk9
@JAXA_en @NASA From calcium in our bones to iron in our blood, we are made of star stuff. But how does the universe make and distribute these elements? XRISM studies the objects and events that created the cosmic recipe of our present-day universe. XRISM captured data from supernova remnant N132D in the Large Magellanic Cloud, shown here as an inset with its location marked within a background image of the galaxy as imaged in visible light from a ground-based telescope. The background is a sea of white dots on black, with several purple knots, each with tendrils of pale red and orange, scattered around. Near the center of the image, is a small box indicating the size and location of an image of the remnant taken by  XRISM’s Xtend instrument, which is inset at upper right. The image shows N132D as a colorful circle with flame-like feat...
@JAXA_en @NASA Some of the most intriguing objects in the universe are extreme, superdense objects like black holes, neutron stars, and white dwarfs. We want to know: What’s happening close to them? What’s inside them? XRISM helps us explore these questions!
Read 5 tweets
Jul 24
Love a morally gray love interest? Black holes are a great example since they have the perfect air of mystery to get away with the dramatic relationships they maintain. From long-term love to one-sided situationships, black holes do it all. go.nasa.gov/46f0skR
Some supermassive black holes, ones that are millions to billions of times the mass of our Sun, are basically childhood sweethearts with the galaxies that form around them — like Sagittarius A* and our own Milky Way.
But relationships aren’t always so sweet. When a star falls head-over-heels for a supermassive black hole, it can be torn apart by gravity in a tidal disruption event. Talk about a bad break-up. 💔
Read 4 tweets
May 7
Did you know that black holes can be social? Let’s look at black holes that are scattered across our galaxy. Most of them have dance partners that can make them easier to detect. #BlackHoleWeek 🧵1/6
This dance starts before there’s a black hole in the picture. Most stars are born with at least one companion, and if either is large enough — 20+ times the Sun’s mass — it will explode as a supernova at the end of its life and leave a black hole. 2/6 science.nasa.gov/universe/the-l…
Since there’s nothing special about the gravity of a black hole, these two can continue their dance. However, there are ways they can interact that make them easier to spot. 3/6
Read 6 tweets
Mar 6
#OTD 15 years ago, our Kepler telescope launched to detect planets outside our solar system. Before it retired in 2018, it helped us find thousands of new worlds … and much more!

Follow this thread for a few of our favorite discoveries! 🧵
Kepler’s steady gaze helped it spot the subtle dimming of a star’s light when a planet passed between us and the star. And it also helped Kepler see a supernova shockwave as it reached the surface of a star — an early moment in an unpredictable event: jpl.nasa.gov/news/nasas-kep…
This illustration of a supernova shockwave is based on photometric observations made by NASA's Kepler space telescope. A red supergiant star 500 hundred times bigger and 20,000 brighter than our Sun is shown as a sphere mottled in yellow and orange, set against a starry backdrop with the dusty, brown and white plane of our galaxy streaking across it from lower left to upper right. A shockwave from the implosion rushes upward through the star's layers. The shockwave breaks through the star's visible surface as a series of finger-like plasma jets in blue and white. The image is watermarked “A...
Our Sun takes about a month to spin around once, but some larger stars take just a few days. Some spin so quickly, they’re squashed into a pumpkin shape! Kepler and Swift helped us find a batch of these rare stars and studied their extreme activity: nasa.gov/universe/nasa-…
Read 5 tweets
Feb 7
You’ve heard that you’re made of star stuff, but what does that mean? The chemical elements in our bodies — and everything else around us — were made in space billions of years ago, before our solar system formed. So where did some of your elements come from? #PeriodicTableDay
The hydrogen that makes up the water in your body was formed during the big bang.
The nitrogen in your DNA was once inside small stars. Those stars shed their outer layers at the ends of their lives, forming planetary nebulae and freeing their nitrogen to become part of our solar system. Hubble image of the planetary nebula called NGC 2818. The image shows a bright blue central region with a smudged line of yellow through the center. Red wisps define a faint oval. The image is watermarked “Credit: NASA, ESA, and the Hubble Heritage Team (STScI/AURA)”
Read 6 tweets

Did Thread Reader help you today?

Support us! We are indie developers!


This site is made by just two indie developers on a laptop doing marketing, support and development! Read more about the story.

Become a Premium Member ($3/month or $30/year) and get exclusive features!

Become Premium

Don't want to be a Premium member but still want to support us?

Make a small donation by buying us coffee ($5) or help with server cost ($10)

Donate via Paypal

Or Donate anonymously using crypto!

Ethereum

0xfe58350B80634f60Fa6Dc149a72b4DFbc17D341E copy

Bitcoin

3ATGMxNzCUFzxpMCHL5sWSt4DVtS8UqXpi copy

Thank you for your support!

Follow Us!

:(