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NASA Wants You to Name This Observatory!
By SPACE.com staff
posted: 11:00 am ET
06 September 2001

nasa_acronym_010906

Are you tired of those impossible-to-pronounce acronyms that NASA uses to identify space missions? Did the SRTM or Shuttle Radar Topography Mission leave you without a map? When someone says GLONASS* do you do a double take to make sure that you're not in mixed company and that minors are not present? When you hear EUE** do you respond E-I-E-I-O?

We know we do and we read this stuff every day!

Well our friends at NASA (the National Aeronautics and … well, you know the rest) feel the same way, too. In an effort to get away from cryptic acronyms, NASA is asking your help to find a user-friendly name for a new space-based observatory: the Space Infrared Telescope Facility, or SIRTF.

Enter the Name That Space Observatory Contest Now!
A short essay explaining the reasons for the suggested name must accompany all submissions. Following NASA's guidelines, names of current or proposed space missions cannot be used, and if the observatory is to be named after a person, that person must be deceased.

Submissions are only accepted electronically. The contest is open to all Earthlings, except employees directly affiliated with NASA, JPL or the California Institute of Technology, and their immediate families. [ENTER HERE]

   Images

In this artist's rendition, SIRTF is seen in its Earth-trailing orbit around the Sun. This innovative orbit produces many advantages, from a more benign thermal environment for the super-cooled detectors, to a better view of the open sky, away from the Earth and the Moon.
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The observatory will allow scientists to study objects from within our solar system to the distant reaches of the universe. It will see these objects by looking for the heat they radiate in the infrared wavelength. For example, the mission will look for dusty discs around other stars where planets might be forming.

"We are hoping to tap the creativity of the public to find a name suitable for this important mission that will help enrich our knowledge of the universe." said Doris Daou, an education and public outreach representative for the mission.

The Space Infrared Telescope Facility is the fourth and final component of NASA's Great Observatories Program, which includes the Hubble Space Telescope, the Chandra X-ray Observatory and the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. Together, these four space-based missions enable scientists to study space across many different wavelengths of light.

The deadline for nominations is December 20, 2001. The winner will be flown to Kennedy Space Center in Florida to witness the launch of the observatory, planned for next year. Up to 200 semi-finalists will receive a letter of recognition and an educational kit. All naming contest participants will be able to print a personalized "Certificate of Participation" upon submission of a valid entry.

A short essay explaining the reasons for the suggested name must accompany all submissions. Following NASA's guidelines, names of current or proposed space missions cannot be used, and if the observatory is to be named after a person, that person must be deceased. Submissions are only accepted electronically. The contest is open to all Earthlings, except employees directly affiliated with NASA, JPL or the California Institute of Technology, and their immediate families.

* Global Navigational Satellite System

** Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer


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