NASA presents a new space telescope to investigate the mysteries of “dark energy”


The Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope is unveiled to the public at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, on April 21, 2026. — AFP

NASA on Tuesday unveiled a new telescope to scan vast swaths of the universe for planets outside our solar system and explore the mysteries of dark matter and energy.

The Roman Space Telescope is expected to discover tens of thousands of planets, possibly offering clarity on how many could be out there.

“Roman will give Earth a new atlas of the universe,” NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman said at a news conference at the Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland, where the telescope was on display.

The 12-meter (39-foot) silver contraption with huge solar panels will be transported to Florida before its launch into space aboard a SpaceX rocket scheduled for September at the earliest.

Roman, which took more than $4 billion and more than a decade to build, is named after astronomer Nancy Grace Roman, nicknamed the “Mother of Hubble” for her role in the development of the iconic space telescope.

Thirty-six years after Hubble launched into space, revolutionizing astronomical observations, NASA hopes Roman will help shed light on questions that remain unresolved.

With a field of view at least 100 times larger than Hubble’s, the telescope will sweep across vast regions of space from its position 1.5 million kilometers (930,000 miles) from Earth.

The telescope will send 11 terabytes of data per day to Earth, said Mark Melton, a systems engineer at the Goddard Space Flight Center.

“In the first year, we will have sent back more data than Hubble will have in its entire life,” he said. AFP.

The telescope’s wide-angle lens will allow NASA to conduct a census of the objects that make up our universe, said Nicky Fox, associate administrator of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate.

“Roman will discover tens of thousands of new planets outside our solar system. It will reveal billions of galaxies, thousands of supernovae and tens of billions of stars,” he said.

This wealth of information will allow NASA to identify areas of interest that can then be investigated by complementary telescopes, such as the James Webb Space Telescope.

Study the invisible

But Roman will also study the invisible: dark matter and energy, whose origins remain unknown but which are believed to make up 95% of our universe.

Dark matter is thought to be the glue that holds galaxies together, while dark energy pulls them apart causing the universe to expand faster and faster over time.

Thanks to its infrared vision, the telescope will be able to observe light emitted by celestial bodies billions of years ago, looking back in time to hopefully discover more about both phenomena.

Complementing work at the European Euclid Space Telescope and the Vera Rubin Observatory in Chile, Roman will investigate “how dark matter is structured over cosmic time” and “calculate how fast galaxies are moving away from us,” said Darryl Seligman, an assistant professor of physics and astronomy at Michigan State University. AFP.

These discoveries could fundamentally change our understanding of the structure of our universe, said astrophysicist Julie McEnery, who led the Roman project.

“If Roman wins a Nobel Prize at some point, it will probably be for something we haven’t even thought about or questioned yet,” Melton said.

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