Canada and Partners launch Astronomical Satellite
Odin has been launched into orbit to search space for water, oxygen
and the origins of life in the Universe.
Odin - is the first Astronomy satellite that Canada has played
a significant role in designing, constructing, and operating - It was
successfully launched today, February 20, 2001 on a START-1
rocket from Svobodny, Russia. Odin's primary scientific objective is
to search for water and oxygen molecules in space which will give
crucial clues to our understanding of the origin of life in the
Universe.
Odin, named after the Norse god, is a collaborative project led by
Sweden and involving Canada, France, and Finland. Over its planned
two-year lifetime, Odin will observe comets, planets, stars,
interstellar clouds, and galaxies for water, oxygen and other
molecules.
To make these observations, the satellite is equipped with radio
receivers operating at high frequencies of 500 to 600 gigahertz: about
a thousand times higher than the frequencies used in commercial
television. Observations of celestial objects at these frequencies
are not possible from the ground, as the Earth's atmosphere blocks
most of the radiation from space.
The Odin satellite not only represents the first step by Canada in
exploring the high-frequency radio universe, it also pioneers the use
of tunable high-frequency radio technology in space," says the
Canadian principal investigator for astronomy,
Dr. Sun Kwok, of the University of Calgary's
Space Astronomy Laboratory.
The other University of Calgary Odin team members,
Dr. Steve Torchinsky
and
Dr. Kevin Volk will be monitoring the launch and flight
performance at the Swedish
Space Corporation in Stockholm, Sweden and at the ground station
at Esrange in the north of Sweden. Also participating in the Odin
project are researchers at the University of Waterloo, St. Mary's
University, McMaster University, and the Herzberg Institute of
Astrophysics. Researchers at the University of Saskatchewan and other
Canadian universities are also using Odin to study the effects of
pollution on the Earth's atmosphere.
"This is one of the proudest moments of Canadian
astronomy" says Kwok. "The launch is the climax cumulating more
than eight years of
preparation. The Odin project represents an exciting project at the frontier of
science done at a modest cost." It began with a proposal by Kwok to the
Canadian
Space Agency, which approved the participation in this international endeavour
in 1994.
The Canadian Space Agency
provided approximately $15 million for the construction and operation
of the Odin satellite in Canada.
NSERC
(The Natural Sciences and Engineering Council of Canada)
is also providing approximately $1 million over five years for ground-based
scientific support as well as for the analysis of data coming from
the mission.
Contact Sun Kwok, Professor, Department of Physics and Astronomy at the
University of Calgary, at (403) 220-5414.
For more information on the
Canadian Space Agency's participation in the Odin mission, contact
Anna Kapiniari at (450) 926-4350. For more details on Odin and the
U of C Space Astronomy Laboratory, visit:
www.iras.ucalgary.ca
Odin pictures
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