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FUSE will explore the Universe
through high-resolution (lambda/delta lambda = 24,000-30,000)
spectroscopy at far ultraviolet wavelengths (905-1195Å), to address
fundamental questions related to the origin of the universe. FUSE is scheduled
as a three year mission within the NASA
Origins program.
Far-UV Spectroscopy: An Unexplored Frontier
The FUSE wavelength region is hitherto largely unexplored. In the 1970s, the
Copernicus mission opened the far-UV universe by obtaining spectra of bright,
nearby hot stars (within 1 kiloparsec or about 3000 light years of the Sun).
Two telescopes, the Hopkins Ultraviolet Telescope (HUT) and the Orbiting Retrievable
Far and Extreme Ultraviolet Spartan (ORFEUS) payload, flown on Shuttle missions, have
also provided brief but tantalizing glimpses into the
FUSE wavelength range. FUSE will be able to observe sources more than 10,000
times fainter than Copernicus, reaching faint, distant objects in our Galaxy and beyond.
The spectral window opened by FUSE will permit the study of many
important atoms, ions, and molecules that cannot be investigated otherwise.
(Hubble Space Telescope/STIS observations, for instance, only extend only to
1150Å). The
wavelength range that FUSE will explore, 905-1195Å, is extremely rich in
spectral lines arising within the interstellar gas, the material from which
stars and planets form. The FUV range also provides an opportunity to answer
important questions about many types of astrophysical objects, such as the nuclear
regions of active galaxies and quasars, massive stars, supernovae, planetary nebulae,
and the outer atmospheres of cool stars and planets.

The number of spectral lines per 100Å interval for transitions from
the ground states of abundant species in the interstellar medium.
FUSE and the Origins of the Universe
Three fundamental parameters, the Hubble expansion rate, the microwave
background spectrum, and the abundances of light elements, are keys to our
present understanding of how the universe formed and how it evolves, according
to the Big Bang theory. The Hubble Space Telescope is making progress in
measuring the expansion of the universe, and the Cosmic Background Explorer
(COBE) has yielded important information about the microwave background. FUSE
will tackle the third parameter through studies of deuterium, or "heavy hydrogen,"
which was created solely in the Big Bang.
FUSE will measure the abundance of deuterium in a variety of astrophysical
environments, from local gas clouds to distant clouds along the lines of sight
toward quasars and active galactic nuclei. The measurements will determine the
extent to which stellar processing has modified the primordial abundance of
deuterium, thereby providing a better understanding of the amount produced in
the Big Bang and the subsequent chemical evolution of the universe. This
provides a direct means for estimating the "baryonic" (or normal matter)
content of the universe.
FUSE and the Interstellar Medium
Much of astronomy is spent looking at different kinds of objects and trying to
understand the physical processes going in in the universe. But what if you wanted
to learn about the vast regions out there between the stars? These regions,
collectively called the interstellar medium (or ISM) are not entirely
empty, but contain small amounts of gas and dust. These regions can be studied
indirectly by the absorption they cause in the light coming from distant stars and
galaxies.
So far, from spectral observations at longer UV and optical wavelengths, we know
that there are hot and cold regions in in the ISM, but the extent and distribution
of these hot and cold regions throughout the Milky Way are only poorly known. The
spectral range covered by FUSE contains a number of key absorption features from
the ISM, which makes FUSE an ideal instrument for studying these exceedingly
tenous regions.
The FUSE Science Team has taken on the large task of determining the structure of
the ISM in the disk and halo of our Galaxy. Furthermore, FUSE is the first
satellite with sufficient sensitivty to perform similar studies in the nearby
galaxies known as the Magellanic Clouds. These studies will require observations of
many stars and objects at many distances and along many
lines of sight to piece together an overall picture of the ISM. In the process of
doing this, the FUSE spectra of the objects being used as "background" sources will
also provide a wealth of information about objects themselves! Each FUSE spectrum
will provide information on a wide variety of of science programs.
Other FUSE Science Objectives
Besides measuring the abundance of deuterium and the distribution of hot and cold
gas in the ISM, FUSE will make significant contributions to many areas of astronomy
as it opens this important region of the spectrum to detailed scrutiny. A few of these
areas that are being pursued by the FUSE Science Team are listed below. However, at
least half of the observing time with FUSE will be available to Guest Investigators
that NASA will select annually. These users will no doubt define many new and exciting
observations with FUSE that are not represented here.
Representative FUSE Science Team Projects
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*Investigations of highly ionized gas associated with active galactic nuclei,
to provide insight into the mechanisms for ionizing gas clouds near massive
black holes.
*Searches for the observational signature of the hot intergalactic medium, to
determine how the universe evolved at high redshifts.
*Studies of nova and supernova explosions and their remnants, to test theories
of heavy element nucleosynthesis and study how supernova shock waves heat the
interstellar gas.
*Studies of the hottest atmospheric layers of stars, to provide information
about mass loss through stellar winds (hot stars) and the structure of stellar
coronae (cool stars).
*Measurements of molecular hydrogen, the primary constituent of the cold
interstellar medium, from which protostars and their planetary systems form.
*Investigations of jets and circumstellar disks, to understand the properties
of stars in early stages of their evolution.
*Determinations of the abundances of primordial gases in comets and planetary
atmospheres, to understand the origin and evolution of our solar system.
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