Astronomers Capture the Highest-Resolution Photo of the Sun Ever Taken (technologyreview.com) 39
A reader shares a report from MIT Technology Review: Astronomers have just released the highest-resolution image of the sun. Taken by the Daniel K. Inouye Solar Telescope in Maui, it gives us an unprecedented view of our nearest star and brings us closer to solving several long-standing mysteries. The new image demonstrates the telescope's potential power. It shows off a surface that's divided up into discrete, Texas-size cells, like cracked sections in the desert soil. You can see plasma oozing off the surface, rising into the air before sinking back into darker lanes.
"We have now seen the smallest details on the largest object in our solar system," says Thomas Rimmele, the director of DKIST. The new image was taken December 10, when the telescope achieved first light. It is still technically under construction, with three more instruments set to come online. When formal observations begin in July, DKIST, with its 13-foot mirror, will be the most powerful solar telescope in the world. Located on Haleakala (the tallest summit on Maui), the telescope will be able to observe structures on the surface of the sun as small as 18.5 miles (30 kilometers). This resolution is over five times better than that of DKIST's predecessor, the Richard B. Dunn Solar Telescope in New Mexico.
"We have now seen the smallest details on the largest object in our solar system," says Thomas Rimmele, the director of DKIST. The new image was taken December 10, when the telescope achieved first light. It is still technically under construction, with three more instruments set to come online. When formal observations begin in July, DKIST, with its 13-foot mirror, will be the most powerful solar telescope in the world. Located on Haleakala (the tallest summit on Maui), the telescope will be able to observe structures on the surface of the sun as small as 18.5 miles (30 kilometers). This resolution is over five times better than that of DKIST's predecessor, the Richard B. Dunn Solar Telescope in New Mexico.
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Re: 23 minutes (Score:2)
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Since I am not an astrophysicist, I feel free to speculate those are convection cells.
Of course it's equally plausible that the surface of the sun is covered with billions of giant teeth, many of which are in desperate need of a root canal due to the sun's lackadaisical attitude towards dental hygiene.
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The stars at night
Are big and bright
Deep in the heart of Texas
Give the sun a break (Score:5, Funny)
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Sextillion - don't make excuses - some guys like their sex with the big babes, better yet if they are stars.
Nice (Score:2)
Re:Nice (Score:5, Interesting)
Ask and thou shalt receive [bbc.com].
If my calculations are correct, this resolution is equivalent from being able to see the period at the end of this sentence from a distance of 6 km.
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The video is in the article (Score:2)
I have the photo here (Score:2)
*Yet* (Score:5, Insightful)
>We have now seen the smallest details on the largest object in our solar system
That should obviously be the smallest details yet seen. There's clearly details in the image small enough to cause single-pixel "jaggies" in places, and I see no reason to assume that those are the smallest details present on the sun.
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There's clearly details in the image small enough to cause single-pixel "jaggies" in places, and I see no reason to assume that those are the smallest details present on the sun.
From the BBC article "Scientists can study features as small as 30km (18 miles) across in this sped-up movie."
Cob planet? (Score:2)
Anyone else thinking about the Cob Planet after seeing that picture?
Ironically ... (Score:5, Funny)
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They needed the flash. To avoid burning out the camera, they took the picture at night.
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Warning: Do not look into telescope with remaining eye.
Might have been okay if they took it at night. (Score:2)
I Could have taken that!! (Score:1)
Just take a high res picture of my skin. It looks similar without all the glowing.
Jesus the fucking summary (Score:2)
You sure? (Score:2)
Looks like somebody made a Rice Crispie square out of Sugar Golden Crisp and took a closeup
of it.
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Kids and short memories... (Score:4, Informative)
So it wasn't enough for /. to start using the DEC logo for anything with "digital" in the summary, now they're using the Sun Microsystems logo for things about the star? This is just stupid. Why do I still visit this site?
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I assume the gimcrack Slashdot codebase detects key words in the title and autofills the icon.
Just goes to show you, when you automate, sometimes you automate stupid things.
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wait a minute (Score:2)
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And the picture even includes a polar sun bear in a sun blizzard.
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So high-res you have to put on sunscreen (Score:2)
Amazing what they were able to achieve, with the remaining eye.
Way to go, astronomers! Er, my hand is up here, Buddy...
Rising into the 'AIR'??? (Score:1)
", rising into the air before sinking back into darker lanes"
I had no idea the sun had AIR
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Naming Rights (Score:2)