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Compton Gamma Ray Observatory

The Compton Gamma Ray Observatory (CGRO) was a space observatory detecting photons with energies from 20 keV to 30 GeV, in Earth orbit from 1991 to 2000. The observatory featured four main telescopes in one spacecraft, covering X-rays and gamma rays, including various specialized sub-instruments and detectors. Following 14 years of effort, the observatory was launched from Space Shuttle Atlantis during STS-37 on April 5, 1991, and operated until its deorbit on June 4, 2000.[3] It was deployed in low Earth orbit at 450 km (280 mi) to avoid the Van Allen radiation belt. It was the heaviest astrophysical payload ever flown at that time at 16,300 kilograms (35,900 lb).

Compton Gamma Ray Observatory
CGRO deployed in 1991
Mission typeAstronomy
OperatorNASA
COSPAR ID1991-027B
SATCAT no.21225
Websitecossc.gsfc.nasa.gov
Mission duration9 years, 2 months
Spacecraft properties
ManufacturerTRW Inc.
Launch mass16,329 kilograms (35,999 lb)
Power2000.0 Watts[1]
Start of mission
Launch date5 April 1991, 14:22:45 (1991-04-05UTC14:22:45Z) UTC
RocketSpace Shuttle Atlantis
STS-37
Launch siteKennedy LC-39B
End of mission
Decay date4 June 2000, 23:29:55 (2000-06-04UTC23:29:56) UTC
Orbital parameters
Reference systemGeocentric
RegimeLow Earth
Eccentricity0.006998
Perigee altitude362 kilometres (225 mi)
Apogee altitude457 kilometres (284 mi)
Inclination28.4610 degrees
Period91.59 minutes
RAAN68.6827 degrees
Epoch7 April 1991, 18:37:00 UTC[2]
Main Telescopes (Four)
TypeScintillation detectors
Focal lengthVaried by instrument
Collecting areaVaried by instrument
WavelengthsX-ray to γ-ray, 20 keV – 30 GeV (40 pm – 60 am)
Instruments
BATSE, OSSE, COMPTEL, EGRET
 
Launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis carrying the observatory to Earth orbit (STS-37)
Astronaut Jay Apt in the Space Shuttle bay with the observatory partially deployed but still attached to the Shuttle's robotic arm

Costing $617 million,[4] the CGRO was part of NASA's "Great Observatories" series, along with the Hubble Space Telescope, the Chandra X-ray Observatory, and the Spitzer Space Telescope.[5] It was the second of the series to be launched into space, following the Hubble Space Telescope. The CGRO was named after Arthur Compton, an American physicist and former chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis who received the Nobel prize for work involved with gamma-ray physics. CGRO was built by TRW (now Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems) in Redondo Beach, California. CGRO was an international collaboration and additional contributions came from the European Space Agency and various universities, as well as the U.S. Naval Research Laboratory.

Successors to CGRO include the ESA INTEGRAL spacecraft (launched 2002), NASA's Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission (launched 2004), ASI AGILE (satellite) (launched 2007) and NASA's Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope (launched 2008); all remain operational as of May 2023.

Instruments edit

 
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory cutaway

CGRO carried a complement of four instruments that covered an unprecedented six orders of the electromagnetic spectrum, from 20 keV to 30 GeV (from 0.02 MeV to 30000 MeV). Those are presented below in order of increasing spectral energy coverage:

BATSE edit

The Burst and Transient Source Experiment (BATSE) by NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center searched the sky for gamma-ray bursts (20 to >600 keV) and conducted full-sky surveys for long-lived sources. It consisted of eight identical detector modules, one at each of the satellite's corners.[6] Each module consisted of both a NaI(Tl) Large Area Detector (LAD) covering the 20 keV to ~2 MeV range, 50.48 cm in dia by 1.27 cm thick, and a 12.7 cm dia by 7.62 cm thick NaI Spectroscopy Detector, which extended the upper energy range to 8 MeV, all surrounded by a plastic scintillator in active anti-coincidence to veto the large background rates due to cosmic rays and trapped radiation. Sudden increases in the LAD rates triggered a high-speed data storage mode, the details of the burst being read out to telemetry later. Bursts were typically detected at rates of roughly one per day over the 9-year CGRO mission. A strong burst could result in the observation of many thousands of gamma-rays within a time interval ranging from ~0.1 s up to about 100 s.

OSSE edit

The Oriented Scintillation Spectrometer Experiment (OSSE) by the Naval Research Laboratory detected gamma rays entering the field of view of any of four detector modules, which could be pointed individually, and were effective in the 0.05 to 10 MeV range. Each detector had a central scintillation spectrometer crystal of NaI(Tl) 12 in (303 mm) in diameter, by 4 in (102 mm) thick, optically coupled at the rear to a 3 in (76.2 mm) thick CsI(Na) crystal of similar diameter, viewed by seven photomultiplier tubes, operated as a phoswich: i.e., particle and gamma-ray events from the rear produced slow-rise time (~1 μs) pulses, which could be electronically distinguished from pure NaI events from the front, which produced faster (~0.25 μs) pulses. Thus the CsI backing crystal acted as an active anticoincidence shield, vetoing events from the rear. A further barrel-shaped CsI shield, also in electronic anticoincidence, surrounded the central detector on the sides and provided coarse collimation, rejecting gamma rays and charged particles from the sides or most of the forward field-of-view (FOV). A finer level of angular collimation was provided by a tungsten slat collimator grid within the outer CsI barrel, which collimated the response to a 3.8° x 11.4° FWHM rectangular FOV. A plastic scintillator across the front of each module vetoed charged particles entering from the front. The four detectors were typically operated in pairs of two. During a gamma-ray source observation, one detector would take observations of the source, while the other would slew slightly off source to measure the background levels. The two detectors would routinely switch roles, allowing for more accurate measurements of both the source and background. The instruments could slew with a speed of approximately 2 degrees per second.

COMPTEL edit

The Imaging Compton Telescope (COMPTEL) by the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, the University of New Hampshire, Netherlands Institute for Space Research, and ESA's Astrophysics Division was tuned to the 0.75-30 MeV energy range and determined the angle of arrival of photons to within a degree and the energy to within five percent at higher energies. The instrument had a field of view of one steradian. For cosmic gamma-ray events, the experiment required two nearly simultaneous interactions, in a set of front and rear scintillators. Gamma rays would Compton scatter in a forward detector module, where the interaction energy E1, given to the recoil electron was measured, while the Compton scattered photon would then be caught in one of the second layers of scintillators to the rear, where its total energy, E2, would be measured. From these two energies, E1 and E2, the Compton scattering angle, angle θ, can be determined, along with the total energy, E1 + E2, of the incident photon. The positions of the interactions, in both the front and rear scintillators, was also measured. The vector, V, connecting the two interaction points determined a direction to the sky, and the angle θ about this direction, defined a cone about V on which the source of the photon must lie, and a corresponding "event circle" on the sky. Because of the requirement for a near coincidence between the two interactions, with the correct delay of a few nanoseconds, most modes of background production were strongly suppressed. From the collection of many event energies and event circles, a map of the positions of sources, along with their photon fluxes and spectra, could be determined.

EGRET edit

Instruments
Instrument Observing
BATSE 0.02 – 8 MeV
OSSE 0.05 – 10 MeV
COMPTEL 0.75 – 30 MeV
EGRET 20 – 30 000 MeV

The Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope (EGRET) measured high energy (20 MeV to 30 GeV) gamma-ray source positions to a fraction of a degree and photon energy to within 15 percent. EGRET was developed by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics, and Stanford University. Its detector operated on the principle of electron-positron pair production from high energy photons interacting in the detector. The tracks of the high-energy electron and positron created were measured within the detector volume, and the axis of the V of the two emerging particles projected to the sky. Finally, their total energy was measured in a large calorimeter scintillation detector at the rear of the instrument.

Results edit

 
The Moon as seen by the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, in gamma rays of greater than 20 MeV. These are produced by cosmic ray bombardment of its surface. The Sun, which has no similar surface of high atomic number to act as target for cosmic rays, cannot be seen at all at these energies, which are too high to emerge from primary nuclear reactions, such as solar nuclear fusion.[7]

Basic results edit

  • The EGRET instrument conducted the first all sky survey above 100 MeV. Using four years of data it discovered 271 sources, 170 of which were unidentified.
  • The COMPTEL instrument completed an all sky map of 26
    Al
    (a radioactive isotope of aluminum).
  • The OSSE instrument completed the most comprehensive survey of the galactic center, and discovered a possible antimatter "cloud" above the center.
  • The BATSE instrument averaged one gamma ray burst event detection per day for a total of approximately 2700 detections. It definitively showed that the majority of gamma-ray bursts must originate in distant galaxies, not nearby in our own Milky Way, and therefore must be enormously energetic.
  • The discovery of the first four soft gamma ray repeaters; these sources were relatively weak, mostly below 100 keV and had unpredictable periods of activity and inactivity
  • The separation of GRBs into two time profiles: short duration GRBs that last less than 2 seconds, and long duration GRBs that last longer than this.

GRB 990123 edit

Gamma ray burst 990123 (23 January 1999) was one of the brightest bursts recorded at the time, and was the first GRB with an optical afterglow observed during the prompt gamma ray emission (a reverse shock flash). This allowed astronomers to measure a redshift of 1.6 and a distance of 3.2 Gpc. Combining the measured energy of the burst in gamma-rays and the distance, the total emitted energy assuming an isotropic explosion could be deduced and resulted in the direct conversion of approximately two solar masses into energy. This finally convinced the community that GRB afterglows resulted from highly collimated explosions, which strongly reduced the needed energy budget.

Miscellaneous results edit

History edit

Proposal
Work started in 1977.
Funding and Development
CGRO was designed for in-orbit refuelling/servicing.[8]
Construction and test
Launch and Commissioning
Launched 7 April 1991. Fuel line problems were found soon after launch which discouraged frequent orbital reboosts.
Communications
Loss of data tape recorder, and mitigation
Onboard data recorders failed in 1992 which reduced the amount of data that could be downlinked. Another TDRS ground station was built to reduce the gaps in data collection.[9]

Orbital re-boost edit

 
Compton Gamma Ray Observatory being deployed from Space Shuttle Atlantis in 1991 in Earth orbit

It was deployed to an altitude of 450 km on April 7, 1991, when it was first launched.[10] Over time the orbit decayed and needed re-boosting to prevent atmospheric entry sooner than desired.[10] It was reboosted twice using onboard propellant: in October 1993 from 340 km to 450 km altitude, and in June 1997 from 440 km to 515 km altitude, to potentially extend operation to 2007.[10]

De-orbit edit

After one of its three gyroscopes failed in December 1999, the observatory was deliberately de-orbited. At the time, the observatory was still operational; however the failure of another gyroscope would have made de-orbiting much more difficult and dangerous. With some controversy, NASA decided in the interest of public safety that a controlled crash into an ocean was preferable to letting the craft come down on its own at random.[4] It entered the Earth's atmosphere on 4 June 2000, with the debris that did not burn up ("six 1,800-pound aluminum I-beams and parts made of titanium, including more than 5,000 bolts") falling into the Pacific Ocean.[11]

This de-orbit was NASA's first intentional controlled de-orbit of a satellite. [12]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "NASA – NSSDCA – Spacecraft – Details". nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  2. ^ "NASA – NSSDCA – Spacecraft – Trajectory Details". nssdc.gsfc.nasa.gov. Retrieved 2018-04-30.
  3. ^ . Gamma-Ray Astronomy in the Compton Era. NASA/ GSFC. Archived from the original on 2009-02-24. Retrieved 2007-12-07.
  4. ^ a b "Spaceflight Now | CGRO Deorbit | NASA space telescope heads for fiery crash into Pacific". spaceflightnow.com.
  5. ^ Barry Logan : MSFC, Kathy Forsythe : MSFC. . www.nasa.gov. Archived from the original on 2011-08-20. Retrieved 2020-11-02.
  6. ^ BATSE GUEST INVESTIGATOR PROGRAM
  7. ^ "CGRO SSC >> EGRET Detection of Gamma Rays from the Moon". heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov.
  8. ^ Cowing, Keith (January 14, 2000). "NASA Preparing Plans for Destructive Reentry to End Compton Gamma Ray Observatory's Mission". SpaceRef. Archived from the original on December 28, 2023.
  9. ^ "March 1994 – Gamma Ray Observatory Remote Terminal System (GRTS) Declared Operational". NASA. March 1994. from the original on December 28, 2023.
  10. ^ a b c "CGRO SSC >> Successful Reboost of Compton Gamma Ray Observatory". heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov. NASA. August 1, 2005. from the original on November 27, 2023.
  11. ^ "Satellite Marked for Extinction Plunges Into the Sea, on Target (Published 2000)". The New York Times. Associated Press. June 5, 2000.
  12. ^ "Entry Debris Field estimation methods and application to Compton Gamma Ray Observatory". Mission Operations Directorate Nasa Johnson Space Center.

External links edit

  • NASA CGRO images
  • Mapping of BATSE GRB detections
  • NASA's GRO Remote Terminal System Installed at Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex

compton, gamma, observatory, cgro, space, observatory, detecting, photons, with, energies, from, earth, orbit, from, 1991, 2000, observatory, featured, four, main, telescopes, spacecraft, covering, rays, gamma, rays, including, various, specialized, instrument. The Compton Gamma Ray Observatory CGRO was a space observatory detecting photons with energies from 20 keV to 30 GeV in Earth orbit from 1991 to 2000 The observatory featured four main telescopes in one spacecraft covering X rays and gamma rays including various specialized sub instruments and detectors Following 14 years of effort the observatory was launched from Space Shuttle Atlantis during STS 37 on April 5 1991 and operated until its deorbit on June 4 2000 3 It was deployed in low Earth orbit at 450 km 280 mi to avoid the Van Allen radiation belt It was the heaviest astrophysical payload ever flown at that time at 16 300 kilograms 35 900 lb Compton Gamma Ray ObservatoryCGRO deployed in 1991Mission typeAstronomyOperatorNASACOSPAR ID1991 027BSATCAT no 21225Websitecossc wbr gsfc wbr nasa wbr govMission duration9 years 2 monthsSpacecraft propertiesManufacturerTRW Inc Launch mass16 329 kilograms 35 999 lb Power2000 0 Watts 1 Start of missionLaunch date5 April 1991 14 22 45 1991 04 05UTC14 22 45Z UTCRocketSpace Shuttle AtlantisSTS 37Launch siteKennedy LC 39BEnd of missionDecay date4 June 2000 23 29 55 2000 06 04UTC23 29 56 UTCOrbital parametersReference systemGeocentricRegimeLow EarthEccentricity0 006998Perigee altitude362 kilometres 225 mi Apogee altitude457 kilometres 284 mi Inclination28 4610 degreesPeriod91 59 minutesRAAN68 6827 degreesEpoch7 April 1991 18 37 00 UTC 2 Main Telescopes Four TypeScintillation detectorsFocal lengthVaried by instrumentCollecting areaVaried by instrumentWavelengthsX ray to g ray 20 keV 30 GeV 40 pm 60 am InstrumentsBATSE OSSE COMPTEL EGRET Launch of Space Shuttle Atlantis carrying the observatory to Earth orbit STS 37 Astronaut Jay Apt in the Space Shuttle bay with the observatory partially deployed but still attached to the Shuttle s robotic arm Costing 617 million 4 the CGRO was part of NASA s Great Observatories series along with the Hubble Space Telescope the Chandra X ray Observatory and the Spitzer Space Telescope 5 It was the second of the series to be launched into space following the Hubble Space Telescope The CGRO was named after Arthur Compton an American physicist and former chancellor of Washington University in St Louis who received the Nobel prize for work involved with gamma ray physics CGRO was built by TRW now Northrop Grumman Aerospace Systems in Redondo Beach California CGRO was an international collaboration and additional contributions came from the European Space Agency and various universities as well as the U S Naval Research Laboratory Successors to CGRO include the ESA INTEGRAL spacecraft launched 2002 NASA s Swift Gamma Ray Burst Mission launched 2004 ASI AGILE satellite launched 2007 and NASA s Fermi Gamma ray Space Telescope launched 2008 all remain operational as of May 2023 Contents 1 Instruments 1 1 BATSE 1 2 OSSE 1 3 COMPTEL 1 4 EGRET 2 Results 2 1 Basic results 2 2 GRB 990123 2 3 Miscellaneous results 3 History 3 1 Orbital re boost 4 De orbit 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksInstruments edit nbsp Compton Gamma Ray Observatory cutaway CGRO carried a complement of four instruments that covered an unprecedented six orders of the electromagnetic spectrum from 20 keV to 30 GeV from 0 02 MeV to 30000 MeV Those are presented below in order of increasing spectral energy coverage BATSE edit The Burst and Transient Source Experiment BATSE by NASA s Marshall Space Flight Center searched the sky for gamma ray bursts 20 to gt 600 keV and conducted full sky surveys for long lived sources It consisted of eight identical detector modules one at each of the satellite s corners 6 Each module consisted of both a NaI Tl Large Area Detector LAD covering the 20 keV to 2 MeV range 50 48 cm in dia by 1 27 cm thick and a 12 7 cm dia by 7 62 cm thick NaI Spectroscopy Detector which extended the upper energy range to 8 MeV all surrounded by a plastic scintillator in active anti coincidence to veto the large background rates due to cosmic rays and trapped radiation Sudden increases in the LAD rates triggered a high speed data storage mode the details of the burst being read out to telemetry later Bursts were typically detected at rates of roughly one per day over the 9 year CGRO mission A strong burst could result in the observation of many thousands of gamma rays within a time interval ranging from 0 1 s up to about 100 s OSSE edit The Oriented Scintillation Spectrometer Experiment OSSE by the Naval Research Laboratory detected gamma rays entering the field of view of any of four detector modules which could be pointed individually and were effective in the 0 05 to 10 MeV range Each detector had a central scintillation spectrometer crystal of NaI Tl 12 in 303 mm in diameter by 4 in 102 mm thick optically coupled at the rear to a 3 in 76 2 mm thick CsI Na crystal of similar diameter viewed by seven photomultiplier tubes operated as a phoswich i e particle and gamma ray events from the rear produced slow rise time 1 ms pulses which could be electronically distinguished from pure NaI events from the front which produced faster 0 25 ms pulses Thus the CsI backing crystal acted as an active anticoincidence shield vetoing events from the rear A further barrel shaped CsI shield also in electronic anticoincidence surrounded the central detector on the sides and provided coarse collimation rejecting gamma rays and charged particles from the sides or most of the forward field of view FOV A finer level of angular collimation was provided by a tungsten slat collimator grid within the outer CsI barrel which collimated the response to a 3 8 x 11 4 FWHM rectangular FOV A plastic scintillator across the front of each module vetoed charged particles entering from the front The four detectors were typically operated in pairs of two During a gamma ray source observation one detector would take observations of the source while the other would slew slightly off source to measure the background levels The two detectors would routinely switch roles allowing for more accurate measurements of both the source and background The instruments could slew with a speed of approximately 2 degrees per second COMPTEL edit The Imaging Compton Telescope COMPTEL by the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics the University of New Hampshire Netherlands Institute for Space Research and ESA s Astrophysics Division was tuned to the 0 75 30 MeV energy range and determined the angle of arrival of photons to within a degree and the energy to within five percent at higher energies The instrument had a field of view of one steradian For cosmic gamma ray events the experiment required two nearly simultaneous interactions in a set of front and rear scintillators Gamma rays would Compton scatter in a forward detector module where the interaction energy E1 given to the recoil electron was measured while the Compton scattered photon would then be caught in one of the second layers of scintillators to the rear where its total energy E2 would be measured From these two energies E1 and E2 the Compton scattering angle angle 8 can be determined along with the total energy E1 E2 of the incident photon The positions of the interactions in both the front and rear scintillators was also measured The vector V connecting the two interaction points determined a direction to the sky and the angle 8 about this direction defined a cone about V on which the source of the photon must lie and a corresponding event circle on the sky Because of the requirement for a near coincidence between the two interactions with the correct delay of a few nanoseconds most modes of background production were strongly suppressed From the collection of many event energies and event circles a map of the positions of sources along with their photon fluxes and spectra could be determined EGRET edit Instruments Instrument Observing BATSE 0 02 8 MeV OSSE 0 05 10 MeV COMPTEL 0 75 30 MeV EGRET 20 30 000 MeV Main article Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope The Energetic Gamma Ray Experiment Telescope EGRET measured high energy 20 MeV to 30 GeV gamma ray source positions to a fraction of a degree and photon energy to within 15 percent EGRET was developed by NASA Goddard Space Flight Center the Max Planck Institute for Extraterrestrial Physics and Stanford University Its detector operated on the principle of electron positron pair production from high energy photons interacting in the detector The tracks of the high energy electron and positron created were measured within the detector volume and the axis of the V of the two emerging particles projected to the sky Finally their total energy was measured in a large calorimeter scintillation detector at the rear of the instrument Results edit nbsp The Moon as seen by the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory in gamma rays of greater than 20 MeV These are produced by cosmic ray bombardment of its surface The Sun which has no similar surface of high atomic number to act as target for cosmic rays cannot be seen at all at these energies which are too high to emerge from primary nuclear reactions such as solar nuclear fusion 7 Basic results edit The EGRET instrument conducted the first all sky survey above 100 MeV Using four years of data it discovered 271 sources 170 of which were unidentified The COMPTEL instrument completed an all sky map of 26 Al a radioactive isotope of aluminum The OSSE instrument completed the most comprehensive survey of the galactic center and discovered a possible antimatter cloud above the center The BATSE instrument averaged one gamma ray burst event detection per day for a total of approximately 2700 detections It definitively showed that the majority of gamma ray bursts must originate in distant galaxies not nearby in our own Milky Way and therefore must be enormously energetic The discovery of the first four soft gamma ray repeaters these sources were relatively weak mostly below 100 keV and had unpredictable periods of activity and inactivity The separation of GRBs into two time profiles short duration GRBs that last less than 2 seconds and long duration GRBs that last longer than this GRB 990123 edit Main article GRB 990123 Gamma ray burst 990123 23 January 1999 was one of the brightest bursts recorded at the time and was the first GRB with an optical afterglow observed during the prompt gamma ray emission a reverse shock flash This allowed astronomers to measure a redshift of 1 6 and a distance of 3 2 Gpc Combining the measured energy of the burst in gamma rays and the distance the total emitted energy assuming an isotropic explosion could be deduced and resulted in the direct conversion of approximately two solar masses into energy This finally convinced the community that GRB afterglows resulted from highly collimated explosions which strongly reduced the needed energy budget Miscellaneous results edit The completion of both a pulsar survey and a supernova remnant survey The discovery of terrestrial gamma ray sources in 1994 that came from thundercloudsHistory editProposal Work started in 1977 Funding and Development CGRO was designed for in orbit refuelling servicing 8 Construction and test Launch and Commissioning Launched 7 April 1991 Fuel line problems were found soon after launch which discouraged frequent orbital reboosts Communications Loss of data tape recorder and mitigation Onboard data recorders failed in 1992 which reduced the amount of data that could be downlinked Another TDRS ground station was built to reduce the gaps in data collection 9 Orbital re boost edit nbsp Compton Gamma Ray Observatory being deployed from Space Shuttle Atlantis in 1991 in Earth orbit It was deployed to an altitude of 450 km on April 7 1991 when it was first launched 10 Over time the orbit decayed and needed re boosting to prevent atmospheric entry sooner than desired 10 It was reboosted twice using onboard propellant in October 1993 from 340 km to 450 km altitude and in June 1997 from 440 km to 515 km altitude to potentially extend operation to 2007 10 De orbit editAfter one of its three gyroscopes failed in December 1999 the observatory was deliberately de orbited At the time the observatory was still operational however the failure of another gyroscope would have made de orbiting much more difficult and dangerous With some controversy NASA decided in the interest of public safety that a controlled crash into an ocean was preferable to letting the craft come down on its own at random 4 It entered the Earth s atmosphere on 4 June 2000 with the debris that did not burn up six 1 800 pound aluminum I beams and parts made of titanium including more than 5 000 bolts falling into the Pacific Ocean 11 This de orbit was NASA s first intentional controlled de orbit of a satellite 12 See also edit nbsp Spaceflight portal Gamma ray astronomy NASA Great Observatories program List of heaviest spacecraftReferences edit NASA NSSDCA Spacecraft Details nssdc gsfc nasa gov Retrieved 2018 04 30 NASA NSSDCA Spacecraft Trajectory Details nssdc gsfc nasa gov Retrieved 2018 04 30 Gamma Ray Astronomy in the Compton Era The Instruments Gamma Ray Astronomy in the Compton Era NASA GSFC Archived from the original on 2009 02 24 Retrieved 2007 12 07 a b Spaceflight Now CGRO Deorbit NASA space telescope heads for fiery crash into Pacific spaceflightnow com Barry Logan MSFC Kathy Forsythe MSFC NASA NASA s Great Observatories www nasa gov Archived from the original on 2011 08 20 Retrieved 2020 11 02 BATSE GUEST INVESTIGATOR PROGRAM CGRO SSC gt gt EGRET Detection of Gamma Rays from the Moon heasarc gsfc nasa gov Cowing Keith January 14 2000 NASA Preparing Plans for Destructive Reentry to End Compton Gamma Ray Observatory s Mission SpaceRef Archived from the original on December 28 2023 March 1994 Gamma Ray Observatory Remote Terminal System GRTS Declared Operational NASA March 1994 Archived from the original on December 28 2023 a b c CGRO SSC gt gt Successful Reboost of Compton Gamma Ray Observatory heasarc gsfc nasa gov NASA August 1 2005 Archived from the original on November 27 2023 Satellite Marked for Extinction Plunges Into the Sea on Target Published 2000 The New York Times Associated Press June 5 2000 Entry Debris Field estimation methods and application to Compton Gamma Ray Observatory Mission Operations Directorate Nasa Johnson Space Center External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Compton Gamma Ray Observatory NASA Compton Gamma Ray Observatory site NASA CGRO images Mapping of BATSE GRB detections NASA s GRO Remote Terminal System Installed at Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Compton Gamma Ray Observatory amp oldid 1213909302 BATSE, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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