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Palvelut KalenteriRSS feeds Tilaa
|  |  |  |  | | | Mitä on painovoima? 16 syyskuuta 2002
 | LISA will be the first space-based mission to attempt the detection of gravitational waves. These are ripples in space that are emitted by exotic objects such as black holes.
Credits: ESA |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | The planets in the Solar System distort space, bending starlight. ESA's Gaia mission will measure the effect to test general relativity. Red regions are the predicted areas of the greatest distortion, caused by the planets, and blue the least. As the planets orbit the Sun, so the regions of distortion move with them.
Credits: ESA - Jos de Bruijne |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | Albert Einstein in Princeton, USA.
Credits: Doctor Thaddeus Ozone |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | Gaia will survey more than one billion stars, including many of the closest stars to the sun. Its goal is to make the largest, most precise map of where we live in space by surveying an unprecedented one per cent of our galaxy's population of 100 billion stars.
The map is crucial to our modern understanding of the Milky Way, the galaxy in which we live. The reason is that, during the mapping, Gaia will detect the motion of each star in its orbit around the centre of the galaxy. Much of this motion was imparted upon each star during its birth and studying it allows astronomers to peer back in time, to when the galaxy was first forming.
By constructing this map of the stars, Gaia will help to uncover the mysteries surrounding how the Milky Way formed in the first place.
Credits: ESA-C.Vijoux |  |  |  |  |
| | | |  | Artist's impression of the BepiColombo spacecraft arrriving at the planet Mercury
Credits: ESA 2001, Illustration by Medialab |  |  |  |  |
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|  | Related links ESA ScienceLISA homepageESA's Gaia websiteBepiColombo
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