Friday 28 February 2020 9.00am EST
During the last week Chandra completed the observing schedule as planned. A Chandra press release was issued on Feb 27 describing observations of the Ophiuchus Galaxy Cluster in which astronomers have discovered the biggest explosion seen in the Universe. A supermassive black hole in the central galaxy of the cluster caused the explosion, blasting out jets that carved a cavity in the surrounding hot gas. Astronomers obtained this result using data from NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, XMM-Newton, and two radio telescopes in Australia and India. The explosion released a factor of five more energy than the previous record holder and hundreds of thousands of times more than typical clusters. For details see: https://chandra.harvard.edu/press/20_releases/press_022720.html The schedule of targets for the next week is shown below and includes an observation of Eta Carinae coordinated with HST. |
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PSZ2G104.74+40.42 ACIS-S Mar 2 IRAS11058-1131 ACIS-S SPT-CLJ2334-5308 ACIS-I Radiation Belts Mar 3 NGC4839 ACIS-I ARLac HRC-S Mar 4 ARLac HRC-S ARLac HRC-S ARLac HRC-S NGC4839 ACIS-I ARLac HRC-S ARLac HRC-S ARLac HRC-S NGC4839 ACIS-I KIC11606854 ACIS-S Mar 5 A1240 ACIS-I Radiation Belts Mar 6 Spiderweb ACIS-S EtaCarinaeShallow ACIS-S SPT-CLJ2334-5308 ACIS-I Spiderweb ACIS-S Mar 7 E0102-72 ACIS-S A1240 ACIS-I Mar 8 Radiation Belts
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All spacecraft subsystems continued to support nominal operations.
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