WEBVTT FILE 1 00:00:00.010 --> 00:00:04.010 [Music] The universe appears 2 00:00:04.030 --> 00:00:08.050 to be infinite, but starting from his tiny 3 00:00:08.070 --> 00:00:12.070 dot in one corner of the Milky Way, man is beginning 4 00:00:12.090 --> 00:00:16.100 his conquest of it. [Music] 5 00:00:16.120 --> 00:00:20.120 [Music] 6 00:00:20.140 --> 00:00:24.140 After his first trial steps, he will one day walk 7 00:00:24.160 --> 00:00:28.170 the Moon. We can marvel at such exploits, 8 00:00:28.190 --> 00:00:32.180 even as we realize the chances are slight that man will venture 9 00:00:32.200 --> 00:00:36.210 personally beyond his own solar system. It is a long 10 00:00:36.230 --> 00:00:40.250 way to the stars. 11 00:00:40.270 --> 00:00:44.290 The sole source of knowledge of objects beyond our solar system 12 00:00:44.310 --> 00:00:48.310 is electromagnetic radiation. But despite the fact that 13 00:00:48.330 --> 00:00:52.340 we receive almost all our knowledge through our eyes, the visible 14 00:00:52.360 --> 00:00:56.350 spectrum is a narrow one. We might see many new 15 00:00:56.370 --> 00:01:00.380 colors if we could see into other wavelengths, and the light 16 00:01:00.400 --> 00:01:04.400 invisible to us can tell us much about the mysteries of space. 17 00:01:04.420 --> 00:01:08.420 Already, this invisible light has led us to a new 18 00:01:08.440 --> 00:01:12.450 understanding of the universe, and provided unsuspected puzzles 19 00:01:12.470 --> 00:01:16.480 for our solution. 20 00:01:16.500 --> 00:01:20.510 The envelope of air which protects life on Earth also 21 00:01:20.530 --> 00:01:24.530 screens out, or absorbs, the starlight in this portion 22 00:01:24.550 --> 00:01:28.550 of the spectrum, and it is these invisible radiations 23 00:01:28.570 --> 00:01:32.570 that could one day tell us how stars are born and die. 24 00:01:32.590 --> 00:01:36.590 And how the universe was created. For Earth-bound astronomers, 25 00:01:36.610 --> 00:01:40.620 the challenge is tantalizing. Yes, it is beyond the air 26 00:01:40.640 --> 00:01:44.660 that we must go if we seek a clearer image of the heavens. 27 00:01:44.680 --> 00:01:48.680 Above distortion that makes the stars twinkle, 28 00:01:48.700 --> 00:01:52.720 above the blotter of air that absorbs the ultraviolet, 29 00:01:52.740 --> 00:01:56.740 the X-rays, the gamma rays, on which 30 00:01:56.760 --> 00:02:00.760 much of the study of starlight depends. 31 00:02:00.780 --> 00:02:04.800 We need a solid platform, hundreds of miles out in space, 32 00:02:04.820 --> 00:02:08.820 from which to make our studies. Not a rocket, not a balloon, 33 00:02:08.840 --> 00:02:12.840 but an orbiting astronomical observatory, and that is what has 34 00:02:12.860 --> 00:02:16.870 been developed by scientists at the Goddard Space Flight Center, 35 00:02:16.890 --> 00:02:20.910 where Dr. James Kupperian headed a group of distinguished astronomers. 36 00:02:20.930 --> 00:02:24.930 [Music] 37 00:02:24.950 --> 00:02:28.950 To know the stars, we must capture starlight, 38 00:02:28.970 --> 00:02:32.980 light that is cut off forever from human eyes on Earth. For this, 39 00:02:33.000 --> 00:02:37.010 we need special telescopes. [Dr. Kupperian]: With the Goddard telescope in space, 40 00:02:37.030 --> 00:02:41.060 we can sample radiations emitted from within our own 41 00:02:41.080 --> 00:02:45.080 galaxy and compare them to emissions from 42 00:02:45.100 --> 00:02:49.100 galaxies tens of millions of light-years distant. It's an exciting 43 00:02:49.120 --> 00:02:53.120 prospect. With the OAO man will go a long way 44 00:02:53.140 --> 00:02:57.140 toward solving the mystery of the creation of matter. 45 00:02:57.160 --> 00:03:01.160 [Narrator]: Through our new window on the universe, we shall search 46 00:03:01.180 --> 00:03:05.170 the stars in many ways. An early project will be the mapping 47 00:03:05.190 --> 00:03:09.200 of the entire sky by ultraviolet light. In charge 48 00:03:09.220 --> 00:03:13.220 of making this unique celestial map is Dr. Fred Whipple. 49 00:03:13.240 --> 00:03:17.260 [Dr. Whipple]: The new map of the universe, which will be very different 50 00:03:17.280 --> 00:03:21.280 from these maps, will be made by a celescope. 51 00:03:21.300 --> 00:03:25.310 With four such ground-controlled 52 00:03:25.330 --> 00:03:29.330 telescopic cameras, we intend to make an all-sky 53 00:03:29.350 --> 00:03:33.360 map in four separate ultraviolet colors. 54 00:03:33.380 --> 00:03:37.370 In addition, we plan to catalog more than 55 00:03:37.390 --> 00:03:41.410 30.000 very hot stars 56 00:03:41.430 --> 00:03:45.440 much brighter than the Sun, many times more 57 00:03:45.460 --> 00:03:49.470 than astronomers have previously recorded in 58 00:03:49.490 --> 00:03:53.490 the ultraviolet. [Narrator]: This 59 00:03:53.510 --> 00:03:57.510 satellite, the OAO, is the biggest and most complex 60 00:03:57.530 --> 00:04:01.530 unmanned satellite in the NASA program. Built by the Grumman 61 00:04:01.550 --> 00:04:05.570 Aircraft Corporation, it basically a shell, into which 62 00:04:05.590 --> 00:04:09.600 various kinds of telescopes can be mounted. When it has been placed in an 63 00:04:09.620 --> 00:04:13.620 orbit 500 miles beyond the Earth, this space observatory will 64 00:04:13.640 --> 00:04:17.660 give us eyes to see into regions until now invisible 65 00:04:17.680 --> 00:04:21.690 to man. [Music] 66 00:04:21.710 --> 00:04:25.740 [Music] 67 00:04:25.760 --> 00:04:29.760 [Music] 68 00:04:29.780 --> 00:04:33.770 [Music][Rocket launch sound] 69 00:04:33.790 --> 00:04:37.790 [Rocket launch sound] 70 00:04:37.810 --> 00:04:41.820 [Rocket launch sound] 71 00:04:41.840 --> 00:04:45.850 Launched by a Centaur rocket, the OAO sheds its protective fairings 72 00:04:45.870 --> 00:04:49.880 in space. [Music] 73 00:04:49.900 --> 00:04:53.900 The OAO powers itself 74 00:04:53.920 --> 00:04:57.910 through solar panels, storing electrical energy derived from 75 00:04:57.930 --> 00:05:01.920 sunlight. Once in orbit, it relies on 76 00:05:01.940 --> 00:05:05.950 solar sensors and star trackers to stabilize itself. 77 00:05:05.970 --> 00:05:09.970 Then, it opens its eyes to look through a new window in the 78 00:05:09.990 --> 00:05:14.010 universe. With each succeeding year, a new OAO 79 00:05:14.030 --> 00:05:18.020 will be orbited. The first one in space carries telescope packages 80 00:05:18.040 --> 00:05:22.040 in both ends. [Music] 81 00:05:22.060 --> 00:05:26.080 From a ground control station, men reach into space 82 00:05:26.100 --> 00:05:30.110 500 miles to point the OAO toward any part of the sky 83 00:05:30.130 --> 00:05:34.120 they wish to study. 84 00:05:34.140 --> 00:05:38.140 Precision is such that the OAO could fix on the eraser of a pencil 85 00:05:38.160 --> 00:05:42.160 100 miles away. Observations can be 86 00:05:42.180 --> 00:05:46.180 stored by magnetic memory, 87 00:05:46.200 --> 00:05:50.220 and all information flashed to Earth within seconds. Recorded as numerical 88 00:05:50.240 --> 00:05:54.260 data, starlight images can be translated into pictures 89 00:05:54.280 --> 00:05:58.290 by the trained scientists. 90 00:05:58.310 --> 00:06:02.330 The OAO will be another significant advance 91 00:06:02.350 --> 00:06:06.350 in astronomy since Galileo aimed the first telescope 92 00:06:06.370 --> 00:06:10.380 to prove the Earth was not the center of the universe. 93 00:06:10.400 --> 00:06:14.390 From the time when 94 00:06:14.410 --> 00:06:18.420 prehistoric man wondered at the bright pin points in the sky, 95 00:06:18.440 --> 00:06:22.450 astronomy has developed as a challenge. 96 00:06:22.470 --> 00:06:26.460 The OAO, the Orbiting Astronomical Observatory, 97 00:06:26.480 --> 00:06:30.500 will extend man's range of vision across the universe. 98 00:06:30.520 --> 00:06:34.520 Man, on his 99 00:06:34.540 --> 00:06:38.530 tiny planet -- a sand grain on the shoreline of the seas 100 00:06:38.550 --> 00:06:42.580 of infinity--longs to find out what the stars are, 101 00:06:42.600 --> 00:06:46.620 why they are there, how they came to be there, 102 00:06:46.640 --> 00:06:50.640 vast, in the immensities of space, that 103 00:06:50.660 --> 00:06:54.670 may, or may not, have a beginning, 104 00:06:54.690 --> 00:06:58.680 or an end. 105 00:06:58.700 --> 00:07:02.720 [Produced by Film Graphics, Inc.][Music] 106 00:07:02.740 --> 00:07:06.740 [Music] 107 00:07:06.760 --> 00:07:10.760 [Music] 108 00:07:10.780 --> 00:07:13.680 [Music]