00:00On May 26, 1983, the European Space Agency launched its first X-ray observatory into space.
00:10The spacecraft was called EXOSAT, which stands for European X-ray Observatory Satellite.
00:15The mission was entirely devoted to studying the universe by looking exclusively at X-ray radiation.
00:20Human eyes aren't capable of seeing light in X-ray wavelengths.
00:23By looking for X-rays using satellites and telescopes, astronomers can locate and study high-energy sources of radiation.
00:29This includes supernovas, active galactic nuclei, galaxy clusters, black holes, neutron stars, white dwarfs, and binary stars.
00:38EXOSAT launched on a Thor Delta rocket from Vandenberg Air Force Base in California.
00:42It was put in a highly eccentric elliptical orbit that took it around the Earth once every 90 hours.
00:48It made several big discoveries during its three years in orbit.
00:51Its most famous discovery was something called quasi-periodic oscillation in X-ray binary stars.
00:57In other words, the X-ray light coming from those stars flickers periodically with a very high precision like a ticking clock.
01:04The EXOSAT mission ended when the satellite deorbited and burned up in the atmosphere.
01:08But scientists are still analyzing the data and learning new things from it.
01:11And that's what happened on this day in space.
01:14Would it be when?
01:15You can see?
01:16This looks like akalonisye.
01:17Thor Delta.
01:19The Century Point onde exist, twoa spikes on a large speed thing,
01:23with all time of rising stars seront very unique.
01:29So I have to show you!
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