At Last GLAST

2018-06-11: At Last GLAST
Copyright: Public Domain
Model: gemini-2.0-flash-exp
Prompt version: 1.0

Rising through a billowing cloud of smoke, a long time ago from a planet very very close by, this Delta II rocket left Cape Canaveral Air Force Station’s launch pad 17-B at 12:05 pm EDT on June 11, 2008. Snug in the payload section was GLAST, the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope.

GLAST’s detector technology was developed for use in terrestrial particle accelerators. So from orbit, GLAST can detect gamma-rays from extreme environments above the Earth and across the distant Universe, including supermassive Black Holes at the centers of distant active Galaxyies, and the sources of powerful gamma-ray bursts.

Those formidable Cosmosmic accelerators achieve energies not attainable in earthbound laboratories. Now known as the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope, on the 10 year anniversary of its launch, let the Fermi Science Playoffs begin. Astrophotography