Washington DC – July 9, 1997 – European Space Agency officials are saying that

their orbiting space telescope has passed the 18-month point in its space

"lifetime" on orbit with all systems running successfully, SpaceCast has

learned from industry sources.

The Infrared Space Observatory (ISO), launched November 17th 1995, is

believed to have another 10 months ahead of it to continue processing space

data. Built for ESA by the French aerospace contractor Aeropatiale, the

telescope is collecting data in space of infrared astronomy observations.

The telescope is making studies in the infrared wavelengths between three

to 200 microns.

SpaceCast has learned that the greatest concerns of ESA scientists, that

the cooling system for the telescope would not continue to keep the optics

at very low temperature, and that the spacecraft's pointing system would

fail in the latter stages of the mission, have not been realized. By

keeping the optics cold, heat from other stars can be registered.

Aerospatiale engineers achieved this by placing the instrument package

inside a "cryostat", a vacuum structure which contains 2250 liters of

supercold liquid helium The helium keeps the optical lens at about -270C.

Officials report that the temperature of this helium "bath" remains stable

after 18 months in space.

The spacecraft's pointing system remains on target, with a pointing

accuracy of 0.5 arc second. The spacecraft onboard guidance, and autonomous

operating software is also reported as healthy. As a result of the

telescope's robustness, space officials are believed ready to extend the

astronomical targets that the telescope will observe to a new as yet un

accessed group.

ISO Image Gallery

ISO illuminates our cosmic ancestry

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