Transcript of Fermi 14-Year Time-Lapse Social

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[Music throughout]

My name is Judy Racusin.


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I'm the deputy project scientist

on the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope.


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I'm here today to watch a video with 

you of observations


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collected by the Fermi Large Area

Telescope, or the LAT.


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It surveys the entire sky

every few hours.


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This allows it to do a lot 

of really cool things.


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It can look at sources

that vary on timescales


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from a fraction of a second

to years on end.


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There's a thin band

across the middle of the image,


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and that's the Milky Way.


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The color scheme, blue, red, yellow.


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This is just a way for us to visualize it

because our eyes don't see gamma rays.


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Fermi isn't an imaging instrument

like you think of Hubble or Webb.


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What it is is it's actually a photon

collecting instrument.


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It's a particle detector in space.


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And we make these maps

by adding up all of the photons we collect.


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Those circular sources that you see in

the galactic plane


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are actually individual objects.


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Most of those are pulsars.


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We see sources above and below


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the galactic plane.

Those are largely blazars.


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What that is, is a supermassive black

hole, millions to billions of times


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the mass of our Sun,

the center of a galaxy that is active.


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That means that there's gas and stars

falling into it,


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and it produces jets of emission

And they're very chaotic systems.


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This video


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showing the first 14 years of Fermi

observations is just the beginning.


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Fermi continues to observe

 the dynamic sky every day,


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and we hope it'll continue to do so

for many years into the future.


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NASA