NASA will host a press conference at 12 pm on Friday, January 31, to discuss a new telescope that would improve our understanding of how the universe develops and search for the main components of life in our galaxy.

The agency experts will inspect Nasa Phenex (the prolonged spectrum scale for the history of the universe, the era of re -adultery and the ice explorer), which would help scientists better understand the structure of the universe, and how the Hungary forms water. The launch is targeted for a period not exceeding Thursday, February 27.

The press conference will be hosted at the agency’s jet laboratory in southern California. Watch living On NASA+As well as jpl x and YouTube Channels. Learn how to see NASA content through a variety of platforms, including social media.

Lori Lie Lesin, NASA JPL, will make opening notes. Participants include additional surroundings:

  • Sean Domagal Goldan, Acting Director of Astronomical Physics, NASA headquarters
  • James Vanson, project manager, SPHEREX, NASA JPL
  • Beth Fabinsky, Vice Manager of the Project, SPAREX, NASA Jabal
  • Jimmy Book, the main investigator, SPHEREX, Caltech
  • Cesar Marin, SPHEREX Integration Engineer, Launch Services Program, Kennedy Space Center in NASA in Florida

To ask questions over the phone, RSVP modes should not exceed two hours before the event starts to: Rexana.v.viza@jpl.nasa.gov. NASA’s media accreditation policy is available on the Internet. Questions can also be asked on social media while surrounding #asknasa.

SPAREX Observatory will wipe the entire celestial sky in the light of infrared semi -redness to help answer the cosmic questions that involve the birth of the universe, and the subsequent development of galaxies. It will also search for Ices from water and the essential organic molecules of life as we know – in the areas where stars are born of gas and dust, as well as tablets around the stars in which new planets can be formed. Important astronomers will use data on more than 450 million galaxies, as well as more than 100 million stars in our Milky Way.

The Space Falcon 9 spacecraft will participate in the Spacex Falcon 9 with Protcal (Polarimter to unify the mission of Corona and Heliosphere), which will be launched from Complex 4E at the Vandenberg Space Force base in central California.

SPAREX mission is managed by NASA for the Acting Astronomical Physics Department within the Directorate of Science Mission at NASA headquarters in Washington. The main investigator is at the Caltech in Pasadena, California, which runs NASA for the agency.

The spacecraft is provided by BaE Systems. The Korea Institute of Astronomy and Space Science has contributed to the non -floors chilled test room. The task data will be available to the public through IPAC in Caltech.

For more information about the task, please visit:

https://nasa.gov/spherex

-end-

Alice Fisher
The headquarters, Washington
202-358-2546
Alise.m.fisher@nasa.gov

Val Gartias / Calla Coveld
Jut Payment Laboratory, Pasadina, California.
818-393-6215 / 626-808-2469
Valerie.m.gratias@jpl.nasa.gov / calla.E.cofield@jpl.nasa.gov

By BBC

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