Stereo View of the Sun 158
Roland Piquepaille writes "NASA's STEREO mission will be launched in 2006 with the goal of imaging the sun and the solar winds in 3-D. According to NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center and to the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory (APL), two identical spacecrafts will be placed in different orbits to provide us with 'stereo' views of the Sun. After the launch in Spring 2006, the two observatories will be separated after a couple of months, one orbiting ahead of the Earth, and the other staying behind. So we should be able to see the Sun in 3-D in less than a year."
Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
"Its cool. We have 3-d glasses."
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
"Well, can I just do it until I need glasses?"
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
"No problem! Try these X-ray Specs."
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
sun.google.com, anyone? I mean why not, they're already after all the info on Earth [slashdot.org], as well as mapping [slashdot.org] the globe.. and the moon [google.com].
Re: Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
human eyes are good enough at it for everyday uses but not for judging depth in anything more than a few meters away. For longer distance ranging we rely on our knowlage of the size of objects.
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
Comparing my eyes at 3" in separation, to my ability to determine depth to at least 45", and you have a ratio greatly exceeding 150:1
I'd suggest that these spacecraft will do remarkably well in 3D compared to the human eye. Resolution, on the other hand, is a completely different argument.
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
Such is life
Re:Do Not Stare Into Sun With Remaining Good Eye (Score:2)
FWIW, my eye is getting better, but I think I'll permanently have a blind spot in the very centre of my vision. Means i can't read with that eye, but that's all. My worry at the moment is that I'll
Can't we do that already? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can't we do that already? (Score:5, Informative)
Another interesting part of the mission is that over a period of several years, the stereo craft will actually get further away from earth giving us an ever changing view. I just saw a talk at the Berkeley SSL by one of the scientists about the new solar weather modeling they will be able to do with it.
Re:Can't we do that already? (Score:1)
Re:Can't we do that already? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Can't we do that already? (Score:5, Funny)
yeah, but then people give you menial tasks like escorting humans around and opening doors...it all gets very depressing
Re:Can't we do that already? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Can't we do that already? (Score:2)
We can't do that already. (Score:5, Informative)
Stereo Movie ? (Score:1, Interesting)
will it be a stero movie ? taking a 3D image of a large ball of hot gas that changes shape by the minute is surely impossible
Re:Stereo Movie ? (Score:1)
RTFA
I doubt it, STEREO is simply an acronym for
Re:Stereo Movie ? (Score:2)
Looks like... (Score:1)
Re:Looks like... (Score:5, Funny)
Whoa, if I look away all I see is a big black dot. Damn you, you who messes with the contrast in my head!
Re:Looks like... (Score:2, Funny)
Has this Knowledge Base article helped you?
* No * Yes * I hate you.
The Old Technology Was Better... (Score:5, Funny)
It's 3-D! (Score:5, Funny)
The trick is making one pinhole red and the other blue...
Re:It's 3-D! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:It's 3-D! (Score:2)
Re:It's 3-D! (Score:2)
-nB
Re:Would you have to use prisims? (Score:2)
One thing I've done before was to take two B&W slides, one with a red filter, the other with green. Two projectors and filtered glasses produces a remarkable result. Either:
A) Super-impose the two images and get a color projection
B) Filter the projections and offset them, viewers wear R/G glasses and see 3-D
-nB
Re:Would you have to use prisims? (Score:2)
To view a stereo scene, you would need two lenses separated horizontally by
Re:The Old Technology Was Better... (Score:2)
Stereo (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Stereo (Score:1)
Warning: The theater could become quite warm rather quickly. If so, run... fast.
Re:Stereo (Score:2)
Re:Stereo (Score:2)
Re:Stereo (Score:2)
Perhaps THX would be even better. In fact, I think you could say that THX is all about seeing the Sun.
Re:Stereo (Score:2)
Geez, was I too subtle? This being Slashdot, I thought at least somebody here would've seen movies by a certain director...
Re:Stereo (Score:1)
Re:Stereo (Score:2, Funny)
What? Oh. Not THAT Dolby?
You young hooligans (Score:2)
How about 180 Degrees? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:How about 180 Degrees? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:How about 180 Degrees? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:How about 180 Degrees? (Score:5, Funny)
Duh. It could carry solar-powered flashlights!
I'm blind! (Score:1)
Where in Orbit? (Score:3, Informative)
So how far apart are these going to be placed? I mean, are they going to be at the Lagrange points, which seem to be spread awfully far apart but might work, or somewhere else where the position is unstable and requires thrusters?
Also, what kind of instruments do these have? If we want, can we point them at other things and get useful pictures? Either way, it should be interesting.
Re:Where in Orbit? (Score:2)
Check out the mission website [nasa.gov]. Cool stuff.
Re:Where in Orbit? (Score:2, Interesting)
Rather than launching arbitrary pairs like this, I wonder if we could place large permanent scaffoldings at the L1 and L2 points with docking points to put dozens (hundreds?) of different probes out there without worrying about collisions.
Re:Where in Orbit? (Score:3, Insightful)
They are both given a deltaV, one + and the other -. They move apart at something like 20 deg/year, one leading the Earth and the other trailing the Earth.
"Also, what kind of instruments do these have?"
The spacecraft have a pretty broad suite of instruments, in situ energetic particles, fields and waves plus coronagraphs for taking pictures of coronal mass ejections.
One of the problems we have with our pictures of CMEs right now is that they are
It burns! IT BURNS! (Score:3, Funny)
Don't look at the Sun! (Score:4, Informative)
Every time there is a solar eclipse you will find astronomers warning you to never look directly at the Sun. Even more importantly, you should not look at the Sun through a telescope unless you have a professional solar filter that covers the front of the telescope. Why?
The Sun is very bright and by focussing the light onto the back of your eye (the retina) with or without a telescope, you are putting a lot of energy (both optical light and infra-red) onto a tiny area. At some point in your life you may have tried to set paper on fire using a magnifying glass, so just think about that being done to the back of your eye. It isn't nice. Even more scarily is the fact that the retina of your eye does not have pain receptors, so you will not even feel the damage being done. It may not even become apparent until later.
I built the shoebox with the pinhole deal when I was a kid, and remember being scared to death on the day the eclipse occured!
Re:Don't look at the Sun! (Score:5, Insightful)
more detail for parent (Score:2, Informative)
ID (Score:2)
Re:Don't look at the Sun! (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, stopping at the drive up ATM which happened to be located under a young tree... I looked down and my car seat was covered with hundreds of tiny eclipses coming into and out of focus as the sunglight came through tiny "pinholes" made by the spaces between overlapping leaves which were slowly moving with the small breeze. It was quite a sight to behold right there in my car.
Example images... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Don't look at the Sun! (Score:2)
Justin.
But Momma, that's where the fun is! (Score:1)
Great news! (Score:3, Interesting)
somewhat current sun pic (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.solarviews.com/raw/sun/eitfexii.jpg [solarviews.com]
Freaky looking, but damn cool!
Re:somewhat current sun pic (Score:3, Informative)
http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/realtime/ [nasa.gov]
Yes, those are Live and RealTime Shots
Enjoy!
PS - and yes, that is a NEW set of sunspots getting ready to cross the sun!
Re:somewhat current sun pic (Score:2)
Current sun pics (Score:2)
sun in stereo? (Score:1)
At last! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:At last! (Score:2)
Nerds. (Score:1)
(Yes, I know, eyes too close together, bla bla...) Still.;-)
Stupid frickn' NASA Wasting Money (Score:4, Funny)
Fat lot of good its going to me
(/grumble, whinge, complain)
(And for the humour impaired
(And for the spelling impaired
Re:Stupid frickn' NASA Wasting Money (Score:2)
Steropsis is just one of about a dozen ways the human brain preceives depth. In fact, it's one of the least reliable and least useful, since it only works for objects at middle range with contrasting depths in the same scene, and only when things are relatively still.
Much more useful are the other cues
Re:Stupid frickn' NASA Wasting Money (Score:2)
Re:Nonsense (Score:2)
Make your own 3D images of Mars and things (Score:5, Informative)
NASA provides a guide for those with Photoshop, to make red / blue stereo images like you see on their website.
If anyone wants to convert the steps in the link to The Gimp 2.2, I'd be very greatful. I get stuck on about step 5 when I paste the 2 colour image into the other grey one and don't get the shaddowy red blue image that needs adjusting.
Re:Make your own 3D images of Mars and things (Score:3, Funny)
Pfft...
http://marsrovers.nasa.gov/spotlight/images/3d01h
Backup? (Score:1)
What are the plans if one of these fails? Isn't the point having two of them?
SOHO daily views are best for now (Score:4, Informative)
If you choose "the sun now" and then the MPEG or animated gif of the LASCO C3 (full res is best - and I'm so sorry SOHO for doing this to you!!!) you can watch as a comet makes a close approach to the sun today. Happens every few days. Sometimes they make it out the back, but most get eaten up. We'll see with this one.
Re:SOHO - sorry, here's faster links (Score:1)
or JPEG: http://sohowww.nascom.nasa.gov/data/LATEST/curren
Sorry about that.
Launch at night (Score:4, Funny)
Glory Be! (Score:3, Funny)
THE HUBBLE VIEWMASTER
http://www.worldwideslides.com/View-Master/sp.htm
lagrange points (Score:1)
I see no other reason for this sudden interest in a stereoscopic view of a big bright ball of plasma
google sun pro! (Score:1)
This article is useless (Score:3, Funny)
Overkill? (Score:2)
Can't we just take a picture, wait for Earth to revolve a couple degrees around the Sun, and then take another picture?
Re:Overkill? (Score:2)
Perhaps they'd like to capture events that occur in a matter of hours rather than days...
Re:Overkill? (Score:2)
Jeez, it rotates 360 degrees in 24 days. You don't have to wait for the earth to revolve around the sun a few degrees (slow), all you need to do is wait for the sun to rotate a few degrees (faster). Just take any two consecutive frames from one of those SOHO movies and there you are.
Re:Overkill? (Score:2)
And again, if an event happens in a matter of hours (not days) then during the time between the two "frames" the event could have changed enough that you can't construct a 3D view of it because the frames don't match.
3D image here. (Score:4, Interesting)
What do you think?
http://img487.imageshack.us/my.php?image=3dsun9li. jpg [imageshack.us]
Some of the features have evolved. But the sphere shape is there as are some of the more macro features such as the corona and flares. The granules don't match up though.
That's from about five minutes of work.
Re:3D image here. (Score:2)
Re:3D image here. (Score:2)
Re:3D image here. (Score:2)
On slashdot? You must be new here...
Re:3D image here. (Score:2)
Re:Overkill? (Score:2)
Re:Overkill? (Score:2, Informative)
Can't...Resist...Karma Burn (Score:4, Funny)
Stereo View? (Score:2)
Is that the smell of my retina burning or is somebody cooking a squirrel?
Light (Score:2, Interesting)
Spoiler (Score:3, Funny)
Wow! A 3D view of a hot orangy thing in space! (Score:2)