Australian Astronomers Make Interstellar Hologram 22
KentuckyFC writes "Australian astronomers say the way a beam of light from a pulsar is scattered by interstellar dust is analogous to the way a hologram is made. But to reconstruct an image of this dust, you've got to know what the light was like before it was distorted. With an impressive piece of computer optimization, these astronomers have worked out the 8000 coefficients that determine the light field and so have been able to produce an image of the interstellar medium (abstract on the physics arXiv)."
Astronomers make hologram? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Astronomers make hologram? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Astronomers make hologram? (Score:4, Interesting)
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Information in this case is an interpretation(or reification) of scientists parameters, light data, and correlation by computer into one hologram.
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There are year's worth of data from this object that's in the form of light that will one day reach the earth but is still in space for now. A specific picture they create may or may not accurately reflect the information stored in the light but at some level it
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Information (such as holograms) are as much reality as the material substrate which carries them. Light is absolutely real, as is the information carried by it. The perceived patterns are the form, temporal changes in quantifiable electromagnetic fields are the matter, qualified light being the resulting ontol
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The hologram that was obtained from temporal changes in the light captured is a fair approximation of the original one that existed (and still exists) in the it. Or, to be more precise, it is the same hologram, but with differing accidents.
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The map is not the territory
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Map%E2%80%93territory_relation [wikipedia.org]
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Genetic Algorithm (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Genetic Algorithm (Score:5, Interesting)
This assumes that the system can't actually be solved or reduced/simplified to one that can without losing too much accuracy. If you can solve it, then all you have is some basic matrix algebra on an 8000x8000 array. Non-trivial, sure, but 4Gb of RAM and a good gaming machine (you want fast maths) would be adequate to crunch such data. Alternatively, an analogue computer would be ideal for a problem like this, as you'd have far greater precision and far greater parallelization. It would also take far more space and cost far more, but the world economy could do with a boost about now.
Not always necessary (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not always necessary to judge if a given solution is the solution, because often determining the optimality of a solution is tantamount to computing that solution analytically (i.e., not using genetic or EC techniques). For genetic algorithms it's only really necessary to determine the relative optimality of two solutions so that you can compare them and pick the best ones of the group quickly.
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If you link through to the paper, it is right there. Essentially to reconstruct the hologram you need to know the form of the electric field from the source. To do this they have a model for it that has thousands of parameters. To determine these parameters they use the Newton method of optimization, which is an iterative method. You guess a form for the input and crunch through the numbers to get an output. You then compare your output to what you measure. A difference function is constructed to dete
Like crystallography (Score:4, Interesting)