News

‘A Big Win’: Harvard Expands Kosher Options in Undergraduate Dining Halls

News

Top Republicans Ask Harvard to Detail Plans for Handling Campus Protests in New Semester

News

Harvard’s Graduate Union Installs Third New President in Less Than 1 Year

News

Harvard Settles With Applied Physics Professor Who Sued Over Tenure Denial

News

Longtime Harvard Social Studies Director Anya Bassett Remembered As ‘Greatest Mentor’

NASA Puts Harvard Project in Orbit

Spacelab Experiment Approved

NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED

Empty space--some scientists are paying at least $500 per half cubic meter for it, but Harvard is getting it free.

That vacant space will be aboard Spacelab 2, one of a pair of National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) orbiting laboratories to be flown in NASA's new orbiting space shuttle within the next five years.

Herbert Gursky, professor of the practice of X-ray astronomy, said yesterday that a group of Harvard scientists had successfully applied for an opportunity to conduct a Spacelab experiment that NASA will fund.

Common Goals

NASA is funding the $4 million Harvard experiment and 12 other projects because the groups' experimental goals coincide with NASA's, Giovanni G. Fazio, lecturer on astronomy, said yesterday.

Fazio said some independent groups are paying for their space on Spacelab, but he added, "We're carrying out NASA's project; others are doing their own private thing." The independent experiments are of secondary importance to NASA, he said.

Harvard's experiment will involve the use of a new infrared telescope in gathering astronomical information, Fazio said. James M. Anderson, teaching fellow in biology, added that the experiment will obtain data about the atmosphere of the sun.

Fazio said the infrared telescope to be used in the experiment was the first of its kind. The Harvard experiment is the only astronomy proposal NASA has accepted so far for Spacelab, he explained, adding that some non-Harvard physics and chemistry proposals already had been approved.

The Spacelab is a special experimental station designed to allow scientists to collect data in the weightless, pressureless atmosphere of outer space using their own equipment.

Fazio said because of the desirable experimental conditions the Spacelab offers some research projects, a growing number of other Harvard scientists are in the process of applying for space on future Spacelab flights.

Want to keep up with breaking news? Subscribe to our email newsletter.

Tags