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Space Science

Sharpest Images With "Lucky" Telescope 165

igny writes "Astronomers from the University of Cambridge and Caltech have developed a new camera that gives much more detailed pictures of stars and nebulae than even the Hubble Space Telescope, and does it from the ground. A new technique called 'Lucky imaging' has been used to diminish atmospheric noise in the visible range, creating the most detailed pictures of the sky in history."
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Sharpest Images With "Lucky" Telescope

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday September 03, 2007 @09:21PM (#20458387)
    Well sure. All you have to do is bounce your laser off of those gas clouds to find out how to compensate for them. That should only take a couple hundred or a couple of thousand years with a laser that would consume more power than all of the Earth uses. Oh, and you better hope that that gas cloud doesn't change in the transit time.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday September 04, 2007 @12:09AM (#20459773)
    I've found the inverse process to work well on pictures of my wife ;)

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