- Leon Van Speybroeck
Leon P. Van Speybroeck (1935 – December 25, 2002) served as Telescope Scientist for the
Chandra X-Ray Observatory and designed the mirrors that made possible its spectacular X-ray images of nearby and remote celestial objects, includingcomet s, exploding stars, jets of gas spewing from nearbyblack hole s, and powerfulquasars more than 10 billionlight year s from Earth. Chandra data prompted new discoveries about the evolution of stars and galaxies, the nature of the black holes,dark matter , and the shape and dimensions of the universe.Contributions to Chandra X-Ray Observatory
The Chandra mirrors designed by Van Speybroeck are the smoothest and most precise ever made, with tolerances measured within just a few atoms. The telescope's
angular resolution , at 0.5arcsecond , is ten times better than its predecessor and equivalent to being able to read newspaper text from half a mile away. The x-ray mirror assembly, with its four pairs of cylinders coated with highly reflective iridium, lies at Chandra's core. The mirrors deflect x-rays at very shallow angles, like skipping pebbles across a pond; in order to make an image, each x-ray is reflected twice – once from each member of a pair of cylinders. Four pairs of cylinders are nested inside one another to increase the size of the telescope, in order to collect more x-rays. Pending further identification, the first images received by the telescope were dubbed "Leon X-1" as a tribute to the quality of the mirrors.The Chandra x-ray mirrors resulted from over two decades of collaboration between Van Speybroeck and colleagues at the
Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory and scientists and engineers affiliated with NASA'sMarshall Space Flight Center ,TRW , Inc., Hughes-Danbury (now BF Goodrich Aerospace), Optical Coating Laboratories, Inc. and Eastman-Kodak. The Columbia Space Shuttle, piloted by CommanderEileen Collins , launched Chandra duringSTS-93 in July, 1999. It remains the heaviest payload ever handled by the shuttle program. TheContributions to Early X-Ray Astronomy
After completing his PhD in nuclear physics at MIT, Van Speybroeck joined a team at
American Science and Engineering headed by eventualNobel Physics Prize laureateRiccardo Giacconi on the first X-ray telescopes, built as part ofSkylab (launched in 1970), the first USspace station , andUhuru (launched in 1973), the firstx-ray astronomy space observatory . The team ultimately designed the mirrors for theEinstein X-Ray Observatory , Chandra's predecessor, which launched in 1978 and represented a several hundredfold improvement in resolution. Van Speybroeck also played a role in developing theCorrective Optics Space Telescope Axial Replacement ; COSTAR was used to correct the spherical aberrations on the originalHubble Space Telescope mirrors.In recognition of his contributions to x-ray optics, VanSpeybroeck was awarded the 2002
Bruno Rossi Prize of the High Energy Astrophysics Division of theAmerican Astronomical Society . Leon Van Speybroeck died unexpectedly December 25, 2002 at age 67. At the time of his death, Van Speybroeck was generally acknowledged as the world's premier designer of x-ray telescopes. The "Six Years of Science with Chandra, Dedicated to Leon Van Speybroeck" Symposium was held in Cambridge, Mass., November 2-4, 2005. Topics of X-ray astronomy included: Supernova Remnants, X-ray Optics, Young Stars and the Chandra Orion Ultra-Deep Project, Comets, AGNs, Clusters and Feedback, Galaxies, Jets and Their Environments, Dark Matter, Ultraluminous X-ray Sources, and X-ray Binary Populations.Van Speybroeck intended to use his Chandra observation time, in part, to independently verify the
Hubble Constant , which is key to understanding the universe's size, shape and age. Colleagues completed the work successfully and published their findings in August, 2006 edition of The Astrophysical Journal.External links
* [http://chandra.harvard.edu/index.html Chandra X-Ray Observatory Site]
References
* [http://chandra.harvard.edu/about/telescope_system.html About the Chandra Telescope System]
* [http://chandra.harvard.edu/press/advisories/03_advisories/press_010203.html About Leon P. Van Speybroeck]
* [http://chandra.harvard.edu/resources/illustrations/symposium/symp06/index.html About the Symposium]
* [http://chandra.harvard.edu/chronicle/080999/photons.html About Leon X-1]
* [http://chandra.harvard.edu/press/06_releases/press_080806.html About the Hubble Constant]
*EXPLORING THE UNIVERSE: A Festschrift in Honor of Ricardo Giacconi edited by H Gursky (Naval Research Laboratory, USA), R Ruffini (University of Roma La Sapienza, Italy) & L Stella (Osservatorio Astronomico di Roma, Italy) Italy October 1997 World Scientific 2000ISBN 981-02-4423-1 *REVEALING THE UNIVERSE: the making of the Chandra X-ray Observatory, Wallace Tucker and Karen Tucker Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2001,
ISBN 0674004973 *THE RESTLESS UNIVERSE: Understanding X-Ray Astronomy in the Age of Chandra and Newton, Eric M. Schlegel, Oxford University Press, 2002 ISBN 0195148479
*THE VIOLENT UNIVERSE: Joyrides Through the X-ray Cosmos, Kimberly Weaver, The Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005.
ISBN 0801881153
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