The Nuclear Spectroscopic Telescope Array Mission

NuSTAR will be the first focusing high energy X-ray mission, opening the hard X-ray sky for sensitive study for the first time. NuSTAR will search for black holes, map supernova explosions, and study the most extreme active galaxies.

The NuSTAR mission will deploy the first focusing telescopes to image the sky in the high energy X-ray (5 - 80 keV) region of the electromagnetic spectrum. Our view of the universe in this spectral window has been limited because previous orbiting telescopes have not employed true focusing optics, but rather have used coded apertures that have intrinsically high backgrounds and limited sensitivity.

During a two-year primary mission phase, NuSTAR will map selected regions of the sky in order to:

  1. take a census of collapsed stars and black holes of different sizes by surveying regions surrounding the center of own Milky Way Galaxy and performing deep observations of the extragalactic sky;
  2. map recently-synthesized material in young supernova remnants to understand how stars explode and how elements are created; and
  3. understand what powers relativistic jets of particles from the most extreme active galaxies hosting supermassive black holes.
NuSTAR was launched at 9am PDT, June 13, 2012.

Caltech NuSTAR Homepage
NASA's NuSTAR Mission Page

Artist concept of Nustar in orbit

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