New Wide-Angle Telescope to Capture Night Sky 168
NewScientist is reporting that a new telescope located in Chile is aiming to capture images of the entire night sky every three nights. From the article: "The telescope will use a digital camera with 3 billion pixels to image the entire sky across three nights, producing an expected 30 terabytes of data per night. This will allow astronomers to detect objects that quickly change their position, such as near-Earth asteroids, or their brightness, such as supernovae."
UFO'S (Score:4, Funny)
What an innovative idea... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:UFO'S (Score:4, Funny)
</punctuationnazi>
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:2)
The apostrophic status is made clear from context, e.g.
The UFO's had little green men inside
The UFO's crew were little green me
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:1)
Anyway, why are you taking style hints from a source that seems to think it unobjectionable to splatter its pages with uncontrolled diereses?
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:2)
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:2)
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:2)
I can write "your an idiot" and while people would get my meaning (and retaliate with all sorts of comments about the irony of mine
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:2)
Does the english language actually dictate how to correctly pluralise acronyms (or in the case of mp3, whatever you'd call it), especially those that end in a number?
As for UFO - surely the plural (ie, Unidentified Flying Objects - correctly with no apostrophe) actually has the same acronym; UFO.
I don't know if there is or can be a 100% correct when we're talking about language/communication shortcuts, and while you
Re:UFO'S; no, you have it wrong (Score:2)
Almost any misspelling, poor punctuation or lack of grammar can be understood thanks to context (thankfully, or most of the web would be completely unreadable, whatever the language). It doesn't make it right.
You might want to read something like "Eats, Shoots, and Leaves [amazon.com]" for an accessible book if those little wiggly signs have you confused.
Re:UFO'S (Score:2, Funny)
Re:UFO'S (Score:2)
Re:UFO'S (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:UFO'S (Score:2)
Re:May 20:Prostitute Schedule @ MBOT in San Franci (Score:1, Funny)
Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:4, Interesting)
easy (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:1)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2)
This cheap shot was made possible by that evil tool of the debil, Mozilla Firefox instead of the nice
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:3, Informative)
750. A friend of mine just sent me the link from Newegg.
30TB = US$15000 + computer support (Score:2)
Re:30TB = US$15000 + computer support (Score:2)
Yeah, they're a bit pricy. But they're the biggest hard drives you can buy, hence, price premium.
Now that the new HD tech has finally hit the market, they can use that to drive HD space up to 5TB. I'm going to wait til drives start dying on my system before I start upgrading though.
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:4, Insightful)
A little over a day in Iraq. As a taxpayer, I would rather fund the telescope.
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2)
Actually, Iraq is about a billion dollars a day. 300 million would give you about a third of a day.
strike
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2)
Or that Google will step in and do the storage/search functions for them, like only Google can
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:1)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:1)
You can get from 10TB to 100TB per disk ( with a theoretical maximun of 10PT per disc ), and if they say is correct, the medium will be very cheap just like the player ( it will cost less than the currect Blu-Ray player ). They made the announcement in 2004 and said it would take from 3 to 5 years for the technology to be usable, if they're statement is cor
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Holy Storage Area Network Batman! (Score:1)
There are already companies researching and building usable products based on this techonology, like HVD http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holographic_Versatile _Disc [wikipedia.org].
As it is today one HVD can hold a maximum of 3,9TB per disc with an average transfer of 120MB/s. And this is for a removable media I bet they could use the same techonology for 'hard drive' type products.
This is just great. (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This is just great. (Score:1)
Re:This is just great. (Score:1)
lots of questions ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Does Chile have some state of art suprcomputers to achieve this or are they going to send the data to some other country for analysis.
And if they decide to transfer data to some other country how are they going to achieve that.. is data transfer on Internet feasible for 30 TB per night of data ?
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:1)
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:1)
And you think an OC-192 connectors on both sides of data transfers which requires direct connection using fiber-optic cables is an easy thing to set up between say Chile and US.
OTOH, get over OC-192... OC-768 (40 Gbps) is already there though not in use outside of some very few research facilities.
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:2)
Compared to direct-connecting one arbitrary building in New York to another, absolutely.
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:3, Insightful)
No, they plan on using some tin cans and a string and the guys are just going to relay the 0's and 1's off to a country with actual electricity and stuff.
Please go read a little about Chile. They don't live in the dark ages there. It's actually a pretty modern country and hosts to some of the biggest telescopes in the world. Just because they have clean air doesn't make them Neanderthals.
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:2)
I'm guessing you have never been to Santiago.
From this site [doe.gov]:
"The 5 million inhabitants of Santiago, Chile are exposed to high levels of air pollution during a significant portion of the year."
Beautiful country though, and I'm sure there are plenty of N/A cities with worse pollution than Santiago (heck, the air in Missoula MT was pretty bad when there was an inversion [wikipedia.org]).
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:2)
Never underestimate the bandwidth of a station wagon full of magnetic tapes hurtling down the highway.
Re:lots of questions ? (Score:2)
billion: 10^9 or 10^12 ? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:billion: 10^9 or 10^12 ? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:billion: 10^9 or 10^12 ? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:billion: 10^9 or 10^12 ? (Score:3, Interesting)
Prioritize our needs (Score:2, Interesting)
For 300 Mil, we could probably build ten kick-ass instruments to utilize the existing 6m to 8m telescopes more efficiently. That's where the technology is advancing faster, too. After all, wh
Re:Prioritize our needs (Score:2, Informative)
The reason they are doing
Re:Prioritize our needs (Score:1)
That's exactly the problem with this proposal. It is designed specifically to solve one key problem in the one particular topic in the field: cosmology.
Its purview is so narrow that the benefit of this telescope is limited to those who are involved in the cosmology or the institution like U. of Arizona. Would this do any good for those who study ISM, local stellar and nebular objects, etc? (yes to some, of course). And
Narrow? (Score:4, Informative)
The Hubble (for example) will always be better if you want to look at a specific spot very closely, but a high resolution survey of the entire Southern sky every few nights is hardly of limited interest! My only concern is that it's too much - a few days of data could keep people busy for a very long time!
Re:Narrow? (Score:2)
Re:Prioritize our needs (Score:2)
Yes, yes, and yes. A survey telescope like this will benefit everyone on this planet interested in astronomy related studies.
Re:Prioritize our needs (Score:5, Insightful)
As soon as this thing detects anything strange, the other specific scopes can be aimed in that direction.
Without this, its blind luck whether an event will be witnessed.
Re:Prioritize our needs (Score:3, Informative)
Are you suggesting that there are ways to spend 300 millon in Chile that might somehow better serve the community? At first I thought maybe schools or infrastructure might be better places for the cash, but after reading up on Chile in the World Factbook http://www.cia.gov/cia/publications/factbook/geos / ci.html [cia.gov] I think that some high end scientific spending is quite appropriate. Now should that money come from US taxpay
Government funding? (Score:1)
Re:Government funding? (Score:1, Informative)
What use is it (Score:2)
There's an anecdote about how someone asked Michael Faraday what use was electricity. The answer was "what use is a newborn child?". Ask anyone about the uses of electricity today.
Among other things, this telescope will help to find an answer for one of the most important questions in physics today: how to unify the theories of quantum physics and relativity. This is one of the studies that can be helped by better knowledge of the mass dist
use distributed telescope arrays (Score:4, Interesting)
It would be better to have multiple, interlinked reflector and/or schmidt-cassegrain telescopes ( these are catadioptric 'scopes which use both lenses and mirrors ) all digitally searching the sky together. We can now link such devices wirelessly over several kilometers or even statewide. If you use an asynchronous comm channel to query the telescopes' search telemetry and they reside on an intranet they can all track right ascension+declination at once to look for deep-sky objects or to track Mars. This way, you can aggregate data and pool this information as co-located segments when doing visual/radio sweeps.
The best thing about this proposal is it leaves the door open for volunteers to step in and contribute something.
Re:use distributed telescope arrays (Score:5, Informative)
the competition in astronomy is fierce. there's a fixed amount of money and a pile of good projects. there's a big peer-review process that evaluates possible projects and gives priorities. then the nsf goes round looking for dead wood it can hack away so that there's money for the best projects. no-one is complacent - i work at ctio and everyone there was assuming that they were going to lose their jobs. and because lsst won't really kick in for a few years, we may still be laid off before then (even though we're all working like crazy on related projects). this isn't a bunch of "has beens" making life easy for themselves - it's a vicious, competitive world where only projects that really stand a good chance of changing astronomy make it.
second, the technology choice:
if you are talking about synthetic apertures (like radio telescopes) then no - you cannot link optical telescopes together state-wide. you can control them in parallel, sure, but you cannot combine the data in the same way as radio telescopes. it's way beyond our technical ability. so if there is no synthetic aperture, what's the advantage in spreading them around? especially when world class telescope sites with existing support are very rare. it makes most sense to put one telescope on the top of a mountain in a chilean desert.
and don't think you can re-use any old telescope. the structural engineering of this thing is going to be brutal - to optimize throughput the slews (moving to a new position on the sky) are going to be way faster than anything currently out there. that's one reason the site decision had to be made early - they need to know what they're building this on just to control the vibration levels!
there is a competing project, called pan-stars, which has a group of co-located telescopes. the advantage of that approach is largely political - you can build one cheaply and then look for more funding. but if you do the maths - and this is well understood engineering/optics/statistics, the answer is clear - the lsst solution comes out on top.
oh, and it's not old news either; the press conference anouncing that this was going to chile was held in the room next to my office a few days ago.
Re:use distributed telescope arrays (Score:2)
Pan-STARRS [hawaii.edu] by the way, is not an optical interferometrer, but is still is actually extremely well suited to having multiple telescopes. They are trying to survey the entire sky very quickly. With multiple telescopes you can look at different parts at the same time, thereby extending your field of view.
Re:use distributed telescope arrays (Score:2)
Re: use distributed telescope arrays (Score:2)
I like your idea, but I wonder how easy it would be for someone to take a photo that matches the characteristics of the other photos from the array, given that they have different equipment.
The complexity of the data processing makes me wonder how much of a supercomputer they need along with how they are going to store this dat
Re:use distributed telescope arrays (Score:2)
Set up a factory to
I like this as much as SETI@Home (Score:3, Interesting)
Imagine (Score:4, Funny)
In Soviet Russia... (Score:2)
Other near earth items to watch (Score:2)
Copy cats (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Copy cats (Score:3, Interesting)
Gosh, sounds like someone's got a case of gigapixel envy! As a matter of fact, this telescope will be at a latitude of thirty degrees south [www.aei.ca], (cf. Hawaii's twenty degrees north [netstate.com]) -- hardly the "very southern hemisphere".
Take it easy; as you point out, the Hawaii telescope will be online sooner, but the Chile one will h
Re:Copy cats (Score:2)
Re:Copy cats (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:4, Funny)
No mention of this in the local news... (Score:2)
30 new stars discovered! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:30 new stars discovered! (Score:2)
I am sorry to correct, but those would be hot pixels [wikipedia.org], if (white) stars are concerned. The surprise would be bigger if 30 new black holes were concerned - these could be dead pixels.
Re:30 new stars discovered! (Score:2)
Distributed computing! (Score:2)
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:5, Informative)
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:2)
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:3, Interesting)
I would not argue if you wrote that the telescope control software was written using Forth, which is somewhat likely, but what you said is that Forth is used for the data analysis software, and I call bullshit on that until you show me evidence otherwise.
Note: I work on a NASA project so I know something of what I'm talking about here,
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:2, Funny)
Well, for the astronomers I support, I see use of Fortran (usually 77) more than anything. Maybe a little C or Perl, but none of the other stuff (excepting Python for stuff like Pyraf...). Unless you want to count iraf and/or IDL scripts as a programming language.
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:2)
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:2)
Re:30 terabytes of data per night (Score:5, Informative)
The newer stuff like AIPS++ uses C++.
I'm working on one of these next-generation telescopes, it LOFAR, we hope to have it operational in 2008. All software is written in C++, except for some user interfaces in Java.
The telescope in the topic is only a dream at this point, they have nowhere near the funding to start yet. LOFAR on the other hand is already being build. Our software correlator is already running on our IBM BlueGene, making it the 9th fastest computer in the world. Our 144 GBit/s links to the sub-stations are operational, and the first full substation (of 77) will be operational next month.
These guys are talking 30 TByte/day, we're talking a raw datarate of 1.5 Petabyte/day at the end of 2008. This is going to be the largest radio-telescope in the world, at 300km (200 mi.), at least until SKA gets build (if it gets build)
It's a realy cool project
Mod this guy up (LOFAR) (Score:2)
30TB is a baby game compared to the LOFAR guys (ok, it's a rather "apple and orange" comparison, I must admit).
Re:Mod this guy up (LOFAR) (Score:2)
Those numbers aren't exactly the same as the ones I quoted, it might be the website is out of date with the latest info, or my memory is failing me. They're still the same order of magnitude though. It migh just depend if you quote raw data rate, correlated data rate, or the rate at which the scientific results come out.
Re:The mirrors? (Score:2)
> sh*tty...no?
We're talking about an 8 + METER aperture here pulling down over 4 degrees of sky. That is a ~~~seriously~~~ fast and wide angle lens. If you could buy this for your Canon or Nikon, it would be like (if my calculations are correct) a 400mm f/0.05 lens.
Edge effects and dealing with them must have been a whopper of an optical design challenge. Wide angle lenses can have considerable distortion and tendency towards othe
Re:The mirrors? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The mirrors? (Score:2)
I'm pretty sure thats a typo. The tertiary is probably 0.5 meters. Plus typically having a third mirror is worse than only 2 since it is harder to maintain optical quality and alignment with three surfaces. Having a tertiary is also not at all unique. Though, a tertiary larger than your secondary probably is.
(But what do I know? The biggest telescope I've worked on only has a 2.4m primary)
Pan-STARRS [hawaii.edu] is another interesting wide field survey telescope project currently un
Re:The mirrors? (Score:2)
No, you don't (Score:2)
While the stars in the backround appear in different places from night to night, due to the movement of the Earth around the Sun? Only if you are lucky and your secret space station is small enough they will blame a defective pixel...
Re:No, you don't (Score:2)
"While the stars in the backround appear in different places from night to night, due to the movement of the Earth around the Sun?"
Hmm... so, take one picture, show it in blue, then few months later take another and overlap it but in red, get those old 3D glasses out and woot, 3D view of the universe!! That would be cool...
Re:Google Sky (Score:2)
The new version has the a sky survey included, which is even higher resolution than this telescope will have.
Re:Stuff on the moon? (Score:2)
The Apollo landers are roughly 5 meters across, 2.5M in radius. If the distance of the moon from earth is assumed to be an even 384,000 kilometers, the angular size of a lander from earth is 2 * arctan ( 2.5 / 3.84e8), which is a vanishingly small 7.4e-7 degrees.
You would need a telescope with a resolving power 2700 times finer than Hubble to recognize the landers as dots. Of course, dots prove nothing. A pi