
A new experiment designed to reveal the origin and structure of the
universe has reached its last stop on Earth before it’s set to ride
into orbit aboard space shuttle Endeavour early next year.
The long-awaited Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer-2 (AMS) arrived Aug. 26 at
NASA's Kennedy Space Center in Florida, secured in the belly of a U.S.
Air Force C-5M cargo plane that arrived at the launch center with a
late-morning touchdown on the shuttle's runway...
Nobel Prize-winning physicist Samuel Ting of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology nurtured AMS from concept to reality.
"I'm very pleased to be here," Ting said as he waited for the
experiment's arrival. He was joined at the runway by several members of
the international AMS team and the STS-134 astronaut crew.
Boasting a large magnet and state-of-the-art particle detector, AMS
will use its lofty vantage point on the International Space Station's
main truss to measure cosmic rays with unprecedented sensitivity and
accuracy. In addition to a better understanding of cosmic radiation --
a major challenge of long-duration spaceflight -- the instrument could
uncover evidence of mysterious dark matter or missing antimatter,
discoveries that would help answer lingering questions about the
universe and its beginnings.
"Over the last 50 years, all our knowledge about space has come from
measuring light rays," Ting explained. "Hubble Telescope is a good
example. But besides light rays, there are charged particles:
electrons, positrons, protons, antiprotons, helium, and antihelium."
Ting and his scientific team believe that the best chance to detect
these particles is in space, before they have hit Earth's atmosphere.
"And because it carries a charge, you need a magnet," he added.
Because AMS is the first experiment of its kind to fly in space for a
long period of time, anything learned from it will be new knowledge.
"Nobody has really measured the charged-particle field precisely," Ting said. "So you enter into a new field."
The AMS instrument will be installed on the space station's main truss
during the STS-134 mission, scheduled to be the last flight for space
shuttle Endeavour. Led by Commander Mark Kelly, the mission's crew also
comprises Pilot Gregory H. “Box” Johnson and Mission Specialists
Michael Fincke, Greg Chamitoff, Andrew Feustel and European Space
Agency astronaut Roberto Vittori.
AMS is expected to operate for the rest of the station's life, at least 10 years.
"It's a really neat design and as an astronaut, I appreciate the
elegance of it," said Fincke. During the flight, the Endeavour
astronauts will use the shuttle's robotic arm to remove AMS from the
payload bay and hand it off to the station's arm.
"We're going to put it right on the space station. No bolts required,
no human intervention," he explained. "Box Johnson's going to hit a
couple buttons, and it's going to be captured automatically. The two
umbilicals for power and data are going to stretch right in, and it'll
be up and running."
Sponsored by the Department of Energy, AMS-2 was developed by an
international team of 56 scientific institutions from 16 countries. The
roughly 15,000-pound experiment was built and tested at the European
Laboratory for Particle Physics, or CERN, in Switzerland.
"NASA's extremely excited to have AMS on board the International Space
Station, because we think that it is a perfect experiment for the
International Space Station," said Trent Martin, AMS project manager
for the agency's Johnson Space Center in Houston.
"It shows you can bring together 500 physicists, engineers and
technicians into a collaboration, build an experiment, launch it to the
International Space Station, operate it for an extended period of time
and hopefully get extremely exciting data that tells us something about
the origins of the universe," Martin said.
Several members of the international AMS team gathered at the runway,
excited to see the product of so many years of hard work finally on the
ground at Kennedy. A cheer, followed by the clicking of camera
shutters, met the cargo plane as it rolled onto the runway's parking
apron for offloading.
Still in its packing crate, the 15-foot-wide, 13-foot-tall experiment
was carefully removed from the cargo plane and transported to Kennedy's
Space Station Processing Facility, where it will undergo final testing
and integration before it's deemed ready to fly.
"We have our online testing that we have to do, which is basically
making sure it works with the space station, making sure it can talk to
the orbiter," said Joe Delai, payload mission manager for STS-134.
"That should bring us to about the end of October, and in between
October and February, the AMS folks will be calibrating their sensors.
Then, we're ready for launch in February."
That's a sentiment shared by the entire team, including the STS-134
astronauts, who will have trained for this mission for about a year and
a half when Endeavour is targeted to launch in February 2011.
"It's fitting that on its (Endeavour's) last assembly mission, the
space station is going to be complete," STS-134 Commander Mark Kelly
said. "It's Important to note it's going to be completed with a very
complex and, hopefully, very successful physics experiment. We look
forward to seeing the results that Dr. Ting is going to produce over
the next decade."