A rocket set to launch from Virginia's Wallops Island Flight Facility will study how the first galaxy was formed. NASA says the Black Brant XII suborbital rocket carrying the Cosmic Infrared Background Experiment is scheduled to be launched Tuesday night. It will study when the first stars and galaxies formed in the universe and how brightly they burned their nuclear fuel. The launch will be on a larger and more powerful rocket than previous flights. That should allow it to reach a higher altitude so it can provide for longer observation time for the instruments. The rocket may be visible to residents in the mid-Atlantic region, according to a report of the Associated Press. The experiment will splash down in the Atlantic Ocean more than 400 miles (640 kilometers) off the Virginia coast. It won't be recovered.
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