News & Stories 51 Pegasi b Fellow’s Project Selected for Funding by NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts Share By Madeleine Perkins on 3/7/2023 on 3/7/2023 GO-LoW is a Great Observatory concept to open the last unexplored window of the electromagnetic (EM) spectrum. The Earth’s ionosphere becomes opaque at approximately 10m wavelengths, so GO-LoW will join Great Observatories like HST and JWST in space to access this spectral window. (Source image courtesy NASA.) Dr. Melodie Kao, a 51 Pegasi b Fellow at University of California, Santa Cruz, has been selected for funding by the NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts (NIAC) program as part of the Great Observatory for Long Wavelengths (GO-LoW) concept team, led by Dr. Mary Knapp of MIT Haystack Observatory. The NIAC program fosters innovation by funding early-stage studies to evaluate technologies that could support future space missions. The GO-LoW concept team, which received a $175,000 grant over nine months, hopes to reveal the low-frequency radio sky, which is invisible to ground-based telescopes, to gather detailed data from exoplanets and other sources in space. GO-LoW will utilize a fleet of thousands of satellites, smaller than shoeboxes, working as one to mimic one large virtual telescope. In an interview with MIT, Dr. Kao explained: “[H]umans have never before seen the low-frequency radio sky, and neither have we built a Great Observatory that can change shape to suit the science at hand—or even repair mechanical failures without astronaut intervention. GO-LoW could be the pathway to totally new and unexpected discoveries as well as creating sustainable science infrastructure in space.” Learn more about the GO-LoW concept in MIT’s press release. NASA’s official press release is available here. Follow us on LinkedIn. Science Close Share this page Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn Share on Email
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