Tag Archives: Applied sciences

How Are Webb Telescope Images Colorized?

On the left is a monochromatic image showing infrared data from Webb of the Southern Ring Nebula. On the right is a processed image showing the same view in full color.
Image: Gizmodo/NASA, ESA, CSA, and STScI

On July 12, the first full-color images from the Webb Space Telescope showed countless nebulae, galaxies, and a gassy exoplanet as they had never been seen before. But Webb only collects infrared and near-infrared light, which the human eye cannot see—so where are these gorgeous colors coming from?

Image developers on the Webb team are tasked with turning the telescope’s infrared image data into some of the most vivid views of the cosmos we’ve ever had. They assign various infrared wavelengths to colors on the visible spectrum, the familiar reds, blues, yellows, etc. But while the processed images from the Webb team aren’t literally what the telescope saw, they’re hardly inaccurate.

“Something I’ve been trying to change people’s minds about is to stop getting hung up on the idea of ‘is this what this would look like if I could fly out there in a spaceship and look at it?’” said Joe DePasquale, a senior data image developer at the Space Telescope Science Institute, in a phone call with Gizmodo. “You don’t ask a biologist if you can somehow shrink down to the size of a cell and look at the coronavirus.”

Webb’s first test images helped check its mirrors’ alignment and captured an orange-tinted shot of the Large Magellanic Cloud. Those early snapshots were not representative color images; one used a monochromatic filter (its image was grayscale) and the other just translated infrared light into the red-to-yellow visible color bands, so the team could see certain features of the cloud they imaged. But now, with the telescope up and running, the images that get released are full of blazing color, like this recent portrait of the Cartwheel Galaxy.

Astronomy is often done outside the visible spectrum, because many of the most interesting objects in space are shining brightly in ultraviolet, x-rays, and even radio waves (which category light falls into depends on the photon’s wavelength). The Webb Telescope is designed to see infrared light, whose wavelengths are longer than red visible light but shorter than microwaves.

Infrared light can penetrate thick clouds of gas and dust in space, allowing researchers to see previously hidden secrets of the universe. Especially intriguing to scientists is that light from the early universe has been stretched as the universe has expanded, meaning what was once ultraviolet or visible light may now be infrared (what’s known as “redshifted” light).

“These are instruments that we’ve designed to extend the power of our vision, to go beyond what our eyes are capable of doing to see light that our eyes are not sensitive to, and to resolve objects that we can probably see with just our eyes,” DePasquale said. “I’m trying to bring out the most detail and the most richness of color and complexity that’s inherent in the data without actually changing anything.”

Webb’s raw images are so laden with data that they need to be scaled down before they can be translated into visible light. The images also need to be cleaned of artifacts like cosmic rays and reflections from bright stars that hit the telescope’s detectors. If you look at a Webb image before processing work is done, it’ll look like a black rectangle peppered with some white dots.

A raw image of the Carina Nebula as seen by NIRCam, before the infrared light is translated into visible wavelengths.
Image: Space Telescope Science Institute

“I think there’s some connotations that go along with ‘colorizing’ or ‘false color’ that imply there’s some process going on where we’re arbitrarily choosing colors to create a color image,” DePasquale said. “Representative color is the most preferred term for the kind of work that we do, because I think it encompasses the work that we do of translating light to create a true color image, but in a wavelength range that our eyes are not sensitive to.”

Longer infrared waves are assigned redder colors, and the shortest infrared wavelengths are assigned bluer colors. (Blue and violet light has the shortest wavelengths within the visible spectrum, while red has the longest.) The process is called chromatic ordering, and the spectrum is split into as many colors as the team needs to capture the full spectrum of light depicted in the image.

“We have filters on the instruments that collect certain wavelengths of light, which we then apply a color that is most closely what we think it will be on the [visible] spectrum,” said Alyssa Pagan, a science visuals developer at the Space Telescope Science Institute, in a phone call with Gizmodo.

The chromatic ordering depends too on what elements are being imaged. When working with narrow-band wavelengths in optical light—oxygen, ionized hydrogen, and sulfur, Pagan suggests—the latter two both emit in red. So the hydrogen might get shifted to green visible light, in order to give the viewer more information.

“It’s a balance between the art and the science, because you want to showcase science and the features, and sometimes those two things don’t necessarily work together,” Pagan added.


Webb’s first representative color images were released July 12, over six months after the telescope launched from an ESA spaceport in French Guiana. From there, Webb traveled about a million miles to L2, a point in space where gravitational effects allow spacecraft to stay in place without burning much fuel.

The telescope unfolded itself on the way to L2, so once it was there, mission scientists could get started on aligning the $10 billion observatory’s mirrors and commissioning its instruments. The telescope has four instruments: a near-infrared camera (NIRCam), a near-infrared spectrograph, a mid-infrared instrument (MIRI), and a fine guidance sensor and slitless spectrograph for pointing at targets precisely and characterizing exoplanet atmospheres.

The voluminous amounts of dust in some galaxies and nebulae are transparent to NIRCam, allowing it to capture bright stars at shorter wavelengths. MIRI, on the other hand, can observe discs of material that will give way to planets as well as dust warmed by starlight.

When telescope images are being assembled, image processors work with instrument scientists to decide which features of a given object should be highlighted in the image: its piping hot gas, perhaps, or a cool dusty tail.

When Webb imaged Stephan’s Quintet, a visual grouping of five galaxies, the finished product was a 150-million-pixel image made up of 1,000 images taken by both MIRI and NIRCam. When just seen by MIRI, though, hot dust dominates the image. In the background of the MIRI images, distant galaxies glow in different colors; DePasquale said the team calls them “skittles.”

DePasquale and Pagan helped create the Webb images as we would eventually see them, rich in color and cosmic meaning. In the case of the sweeping shot of the Carina Nebula’s cosmic cliffs, different filters captured the ionized blue gas and red dust. In initial passes at the nebula image, the gas obscured the dust’s structure, scientists asked the image processing team to “tone down the gas” a bit, Pagan said.

Collecting light in Webb’s hexagonal mirrors is only half the battle when it comes to seeing the distant universe. Translating what’s there is another beast entirely.

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China’s Out-of-Control Rocket Predicted to Crash on July 31

The Long March 5B shortly before its launch on July 24, 2022.
Photo: Liu Huaiyu (AP)

Experts are predicting that the gigantic core stage of a recently launched Long March 5B rocket will crash to Earth within a matter of days, but the precise location remains impossible to guess.

The Long March 5B rocket blasted off on July 24 from the Wenchang Space Launch Site in Hainan. The rocket successfully delivered the Wentien lab to low Earth orbit, where it docked with China’s Tiangong space station some 13 hours later.

Like previous launches of Long March 5Bs, however, the core stage—which lacks controlled reentry provisions—entered into an Earth orbit, and a quickly deteriorating one at that. The 25-ton (22.5-metric-ton) core stage, designated CZ-5B, is now poised to make an uncontrolled re-entry.

Experts with The Aerospace Corporation’s Center for Orbital Reentry and Debris Studies (CORDS) have calculated a likely date for the arrival of this wayward rocket body. They analyzed data from the U.S. Space Force’s Space Surveillance Network to devise the estimate, which suggests the rocket will return to Earth on July 31 at 7:52 a.m. UTC (3:52 a.m. ET), with an error bar of plus-minus 22 hours.

“For tracking and predicting reentries, our team uses public data sets that are generated when an object being tracked passes over one of a collection of sensors across the planet,” Marlon Sorge, technical fellow and executive director at The Aerospace Corporation’s CORDS, explained to me in an email.

The Space Surveillance Network tracks objects in space using radar and optical sensors at multiple locations around the planet. These sensors “observe and track objects that are larger than a softball in low Earth orbits and basketball-sized objects or larger in higher geosynchronous orbits,” Sorge said. “The sensors can determine which orbit the objects are in, and that information is used to predict close approaches, reentries, and the probability of a collision.”

The expected geographical range remains excessively high, with the rocket body potentially reentering somewhere between 41 degrees north and 41 degrees south latitude. “It is still too early to determine a meaningful debris footprint,” the company said in a tweet. The Aerospace Corporation will be updating its tracking page as the estimate gets refined over time.

“Due to the uncontrolled nature of its descent, there is a non-zero probability of the surviving debris landing in a populated area—over 88 percent of the world’s population lives under the reentry’s potential debris footprint,” according to an Aerospace Corporation statement. The company says that objects of this size don’t burn up in the atmosphere and that typically 20% to 40% of the total mass of a large object will reach the ground, depending on the object.

Normally, core stages don’t reach orbit and are instead guided into the ocean or over sparsely populated areas. In the case of SpaceX’s Falcon 9 reusable rocket, the first stages perform controlled vertical landings on the surface or on drone ships.

This will mark the third time that the core stage of a Long March 5B has entered orbit after launch and fallen back to Earth in an uncontrolled manner, so this trait appears to be a feature of the rocket rather than a bug. Two years ago, debris from an out-of-control core stage fell onto an inhabited area along the west coast of Africa, while debris from a Long March 5B launched last year crashed into the Indian Ocean near the Maldives. In both cases no one was hurt, but scientists have recently raised concerns that, with all the rockets being launched these days, someone might eventually get badly injured or even killed.

“Spacefaring nations must minimize the risks to people and property on Earth of re-entries of space objects and maximize transparency regarding those operations,” Bill Nelson, NASA administrator, said in an agency statement in wake of the 2021 incident. “It is clear that China is failing to meet responsible standards regarding their space debris. It is critical that China and all spacefaring nations and commercial entities act responsibly and transparently in space to ensure the safety, stability, security, and long-term sustainability of outer space activities.”

China is planning to launch its Mengtian space station module this October, which means we’ll get to do this all over again in just three month’s time.

More: Russia says it’ll leave the ISS after 2024.



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Japan Wants to Bring Artificial Gravity to the Moon

Lunar Glass is the proposed project that will simulate gravity through centrifugal force.
Gif: Kajima Corporation/Gizmodo

Interest in the Moon has been reignited recently, and Japan is looking to get in on the fun. Researchers and engineers from Kyoto University and the Kajima Corporation have released their joint proposal for a three-pronged approach to sustainable human life on the Moon and beyond.

The future of space exploration will likely include longer stays in low gravity environments, whether in orbit or on the surface of another planet. Problem is, long stays in space can wreak havoc on our physiology; recent research shows that astronauts can suffer a decade of bone loss during months in space, and that their bones never return to normal. Thankfully, researchers from Kyoto University and the Kajima Corporation are seeking to engineer a potential solution.

The proposal, announced in a press release last week, looks like something ripped straight from the pages of a sci-fi novel. The plan consists of three distinct elements, the first of which, called “The Glass,” aims to bring simulated gravity to the Moon and Mars through centrifugal force.

02 ルナグラスと交通機関

Gravity on the Moon and Mars is about 16.5% and 37.9% of that on Earth, respectively. Lunar Glass and Mars Glass could bridge that gap; they are massive, spinning cones that will use centrifugal force to simulate the effects of Earth’s gravity. These spinning cones will have an approximate radius of 328 feet (100 meters) and height of 1,312 feet (400 meters), and will complete one rotation every 20 seconds, creating a 1g experience for those inside (1g being the gravity on Earth). The researchers are targeting the back half of the 21st century for the construction of Lunar Glass, which seems unreasonably optimistic given the apparent technological expertise required to pull this off.

The second element of the plan is the “core biome complex” for “relocating a reduced ecosystem to space,” according to a Google-translated version of the press release. The core biome complex would exist within the Moon Glass/Mars Glass structure and it’s where the human explorers would live, according to the proposal. The final element of the proposal is the “Hexagon Space Track,” or Hexatrack, a high-speed transportation infrastructure that could connect Earth, Mars, and the Moon. Hexatrack will require at least three different stations, one on Mars’s moon Phobos, one in Earth orbit, and one around the Moon (likely the planned Lunar Gateway).

The journey back to the Moon is getting nearer while interest in settling Mars is growing. A major obstacle in the way of long-term stays on these bodies is gravity. The proposal from Kyoto University and the Kajima Corporation is exciting and promising, but it’s not something we should expect any time soon.

More: NASA’s CAPSTONE Probe Is Officially en Route to the Moon

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The Most Interesting Moons in Our Solar System

Io, a volcanically active moon orbiting Jupiter.
Image: NASA/Newsmaker (Getty Images)

There are just eight planets in our Solar System (sorry Pluto), so the neighborhood can feel pretty empty. But there are over 200 moons orbiting objects in the solar system, including planets and large asteroids.

Many of these moons have atmospheres, complex topography, and even weather systems. They are dynamic, volcanic, and exquisite objects for space agencies trying to learn more about the diversity of planetary bodies and their satellites.

Some moons are larger than planets and some are little more than space boulders—but all can offer clues about how our modern worlds came to be. Here are some of the most intriguing moons (big and small) that are orbiting around our solar system.

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New Milky Way Visualizations Show the Dance of Millions of Stars in Incredible Detail

Illustration: ESA/Gaia/DPAC/CU6

It wasn’t all stars for Gaia’s third dataset. The space observatory also mapped the orbit of more than 150,000 asteroids, from the inner parts of the solar system all the way out to the Trojan asteroids that trail behind, and lead in front of, Jupiter. The different types of asteroids are indicated by different colors.

The yellow dot at the center of the illustration is the Sun, while the blue represents the inner part of the solar system, with its rocky planets Mercury, Venus, Earth, and Mars, and Near Earth Asteroids, as well as Mars crossers. The main asteroid belt, which lies between Mars and Jupiter, is represented in green, while Jupiter’s Trojans are red.

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When to Watch the Tau Herculid Meteor Shower

Photo: sripfoto (Shutterstock)

Meteors aren’t rare: There are space particles falling toward Earth constantly, and if you look closely for long enough on any given evening, you’re likely to see one or more streaking through the darkness. However, meteor showers that light up the night sky for minutes or hours at a time are much less common, and there’s a spectacular one coming up this month. Maybe.

If all the stars align (ahem), the tau Herculid shower will appear above the contiguous United States on the night of May 30 and early morning of May 31. It’s what Bill Cooke of NASA’s Meteroid Environmental Office has called an “all or nothing event,” so hope for the best and prepare for the worst.

Here’s what you need to know.

When to see the tau Herculid meteor shower

If it happens, the tau Herculid show is expected to peak around 1 a.m. ET on Tuesday, May 31 (10 p.m. PT on May 30).

The meteors themselves are likely to be traveling more slowly and appear fainter than those of the Eta Aquarid shower earlier this month. However, the moon is new that night, so the sky will be dark for peak visibility. Because of the timing and position of the Earth, viewers in the U.S. will get the best show, from about halfway up in the sky to right overhead.

You always want to find the darkest place possible for meteor shower watching, but it may be especially important for the tau Herculids given the slow speed expected for individual particles.

Tau Herculids—new to the meteor shower scene

The tau Herculid shower originates from a comet known as SW 3, which was first discovered in 1930 and is believed to have begun fragmenting in 1995. At each pass since, SW 3 has continued to break into pieces, and experts believe that the position of the debris relative to the comet, the position of the Earth, and the speed may create an impressive viewing experience.

However, it’s a guess more than a guarantee.

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Solar Orbiter Captures Dazzling Images of the Sun’s Chaotic Activity

The Sun, as seen by Solar Orbiter.
Image: ESA & NASA/Solar Orbiter/EUI Team

We’re drooling over the latest image dump from the Solar Orbiter mission. These incredible pictures and videos, captured during its close approach in March, highlight the awesome power of this probe to show us our host star in a whole new light.

Solar Orbiter made a close approach to the Sun—known as a perihelion—on March 26. The spacecraft, launched in February 2020, is a joint project between the ESA and NASA. It’s investigating the Sun using a suite of 10 instruments, including the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager, which took most of the images seen here. The orbiter’s mission is to help us understand the heliosphere by studying phenomena like the solar wind and the Sun’s magnetic field.

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NASA’s InSight Lander Detects Huge Marsquake

NASA’s Insight Mars lander recorded a magnitude 5 quake on the Red Planet last week, the largest such rumble ever observed on another world.

The news comes just one week after the lander confirmed the intensities and locations of its previous largest quakes. Those occurred in August and September 2021 and were magnitudes 4.1 and 4.2. They are now usurped by the forceful event on May 4.

Earthquakes between magnitudes 4 and 5 are often felt but typically only cause minor damage, according to Britannica. InSight was sent to Mars in 2018 to study the core, mantle, and crust that make up the Martian interior, as well as the “marsquakes” that emanate from inside the planet.

Since then, InSight has detected over 1,000 quakes, but nothing as intense as the recent event, which was picked up by the lander’s seismometer. Last year, InSight data gave NASA scientists the most sweeping look at the planet’s interior to date.

It may take some time for planetary scientists to deduce more about the origin of the recent quake, as was the case with last year’s sizable events. That’s because when marsquakes occur, they emit seismic waves that reflect off material inside Mars. Those reflections can reveal information about the Martian interior, but they take some time to untangle.

InSight’s tenure on the Red Planet hasn’t been all wins. After several failed attempts to get the “Mole” heat probe to dig into the Martian regolith, NASA finally gave up on the project, which was intended to be a central part of the mission. More recently, the lander’s solar panels have been covered in dust, which has caused concerns about the spacecraft’s ability to stay alive. So far, it’s still kicking, and picking up some tremendous tremors along the way.

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Dead Sunspot Explosion Spits Plasma Toward Earth

The Sun just hurled debris from a dead sunspot toward Earth, and the superheated material is supposed to arrive at our planet on Thursday (don’t worry—you won’t feel it).

On Monday, an old and dying sunspot dubbed AR2987 exploded, sending a mass ejection of material from the Sun into space, Space Weather reported. That material may cause a geomagnetic storm when it reaches Earth.

Sunspots are relatively cool spots on the Sun’s surface, created when its magnetic field inhibits the usual process of heat convection, and prevents hot fluid from rising. These dark spots can last anywhere from a couple of hours to a few months.

This particular sunspot’s explosion caused the release of huge amounts of energy in the form of radiation, as well as large expulsions of plasma and magnetic field from the outermost layer of the Sun’s atmosphere, which is known as a coronal mass ejection (CME). Think of it as a big bubble of gas, filled with up to a billion tons of charged particles, moving at speeds of several million miles per hour.

The CME is expected to reach Earth on April 14, according to predictions made by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The impact with Earth’s atmosphere could trigger a G-2 geomagnetic storm. Storms are rated from G-1 to G-5, so a G-2 level storm is considered fairly moderate. The geomagnetic storm could potentially cause some minor disruptions to power grids or orbiting satellites, in addition to auroras that may be visible at lower latitudes than usual.

The charged particles within the CME interact with gases in the atmosphere along the North and South Poles, creating more intense displays of the Northern and Southern Lights. The Sun is currently experiencing increased activity as part of this solar cycle, which began in December 2019. Every 11 years, the Sun begins a new solar cycle, marked by periods of violent eruptions and flashes of intense radiation that shoot out into space. The current solar cycle is expected to peak by the year 2025. Scientists still haven’t fully figured out how to better predict these space weather events erupting from the Sun, especially the ones that are aimed in Earth’s direction.

Several satellites are currently keeping a close watch on our host star, namely the joint NASA and European Space Agency’s Solar and Heliospheric Observatory and the Parker Solar Probe, which is on a mission to “touch the Sun” or get as close as 9.86 solar radii from its center by the year 2025.

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Jupiter Twin Spotted 17,000 Light-Years Away

Two views of the region near where the newly discovered planet was found, the one on the left from Kepler and the one on the right from the Canada-France-Hawaii Telescope (CFHT).
Image: NASA/Kepler/CFHT

An exoplanet with distinctly Jupiter-like characteristics has been discovered in old data gathered by NASA’s Kepler space telescope. Remarkably, Kepler made the observation using gravitational microlensing, in what is a first for a space-based observatory.

The new research is set to be published in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, and it describes K2-2016-BLG-0005Lb, an extrasolar planet with roughly the same mass as Jupiter and orbiting at a position comparable to Jupiter’s distance from our Sun. Data gathered by Kepler in 2016 was key to the detection. A preprint of the study is available at the arXiv.

“This discovery was made using a space telescope that was not designed for microlensing observations and, in many ways, is highly sub-optimal for such science,” the scientists, led by PhD student David Specht from the University of Manchester, wrote in the paper. “Nonetheless, it has yielded a direct planet-mass measurement of high precision, largely thanks to uninterrupted high observing cadence that is facilitated by observing from space.”

K2-2016-BLG-0005Lb is “the first bound microlensing exoplanet to be discovered from space-based data,” the scientists say. Indeed, Kepler managed to spot over 2,700 confirmed exoplanets during its illustrious nine-year career (the mission ended in 2018), but this marks the first time that Kepler, or any space-based telescope for that matter, managed to spot an extrasolar planet through a microlensing event.

Predicted by Albert Einstein, gravitational microlensing is a kind of cosmic magnifying glass that allows astronomers to see exaggerated views of celestial objects that would otherwise be obscured by foreground objects, such as stars. Heavy objects cause light to bend over vast distances. This allows astronomers to see the light from a background star from our vantage point, as the light curves around the foreground object.

“Planets magnify starlight only whilst they are almost perfectly lined up with a background star,” Eamonn Kerins, a co-author of the study and principal investigator for the Science and Technology Facilities Council, wrote to me in an email. “Roughly only one in 100 million stars in our galaxy have their light visibly distorted by the gravitational field of planets. And when the distortions happen, they are very brief, lasting a few hours to maybe a day.”

Kerins said these sorts of signals are very difficult to detect, as astronomers need to survey the brightness of many millions of stars every few months, sometimes for years. They then have to parse through vast amounts of data in hopes of finding the signals. Kepler, which relied on the transit method to spot exoplanets (in which the periodic dimming of stars is indicative of planets passing in front of them), wasn’t really built for this.

“The main problem with Kepler is that its camera has big pixels that give us a kind of Minecraft view of the inner galaxy. All the stars look really blocky, and there are many of them in each pixel,” Kerins explained. “The key was to model very accurately how Kepler’s pixels respond in very crowded star fields. Most of the stars in the field don’t vary, so we can inspect Kepler’s camera behaviour with those stars to construct the clearest possible signal from the lensed star that is varying.” To which he added: “It was tough!”

The astronomers were looking at Kepler data from 2016, specifically data from Campaign 9 of the Kepler K2 mission. A new search algorithm flagged five candidate microlensing signals from the dataset (as revealed in research from 2021), one of which—spotted near the galactic bulge—was found to be a “clear” microlensing event, according to the new study.

It just so happens that five—yes five—ground-based surveys were scanning the same location in space at the same time, namely the Optical Gravitational Lensing Experiment (OGLE-IV), the Canada–France–Hawaii Telescope (CFHT), Microlensing Observations in Astrophysics (MOA-2), the Korean Microlensing Telescope Network (KMTNet), and the United Kingdom InfraRed Telescope (UKIRT). The data from these observatories was used to corroborate the Kepler data and further characterize the Jupiter-like planet. These campaigns were looking at the right spot at the right time, but “none of the ground-based surveys flagged K2-2016-BLG-0005 in advance” of the 2021 study, the scientists write.

The newly spotted exoplanet is 17,000 light-years from Earth. It’s practically got the same mass as Jupiter and a similar orbit in terms of distance to its host star. This planet is “one of the closest cousins to Jupiter that has so far been found by any method,” said Kerins. “It’s also almost twice as far from us as the next furthest of the thousands of planets found by Kepler,” he said, adding that “by using this new method, we’ve been able to massively extend Kepler’s reach.”

Kepler is no longer around, but NASA’s upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, scheduled to launch later this decade, is specifically being built to find planets using microlensing. Kerins is hopeful that the Roman telescope will reveal the planetary architectures of other star systems and the abundance of potentially habitable worlds in the Milky Way, among other things. “It’s going to be a great ride,” he said.

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