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Science is cool - Astronomers release the largest color image of the sky ever made

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  • Science is cool - Astronomers release the largest color image of the sky ever made

    High[ish]-res sample of pic: http://www.rdmag.com/uploadedImages/...gestColor1.jpg






    130 BC: Hipparchus develops the first acccurate star map and star catalogue with over 850 of the brightest stars.

    1609: Gallileo uses a telescope for astronomy

    1687: Newton publishes Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica

    1675: Ole Romer measures the speed of light.

    1781: Messier discovers galaxies, nebula and star clusters while looking for comets

    1923: Hubble shows that galaxies exist outside of the Milky Way

    1990: Hubble Telescope put into orbit


    2011...





    This illustration shows the wealth of information on scales both small and large available in the SDSS-III's new image. The picture in the top left shows the SDSS-III view of a small part of the sky, centered on the galaxy Messier 33 (M33). The middle top picture is a further zoom-in on M33, showing the spiral arms of this galaxy, including the blue knots of intense star formation known as "HII regions." The top right-hand picture is a further zoom into M33 showing the object NGC604, which is one of the largest HII regions in that galaxy. The figure at the bottom is a map of the whole sky derived from the SDSS-III image, divided into the northern and southern hemispheres of our galaxy. Visible in the map are the clusters and walls of galaxies that are the largest structures in the entire universe.
    Credit: M. Blanton and the SDSS-III




    Astronomers Release the Largest Color Image of the Sky Ever Made



    Today, the Sloan Digital Sky Survey-III (SDSS-III) is releasing the largest digital color image of the sky ever made, and it’s free to all. The image has been put together over the last decade from millions of 2.8-megapixel images, thus creating a color image of more than a trillion pixels. This terapixel image is so big and detailed that one would need 500,000 high-definition TVs to view it at its full resolution.

    "This image provides opportunities for many new scientific discoveries in the years to come," exclaims Bob Nichol, a professor at the University of Portsmouth and Scientific Spokesperson for the SDSS-III collaboration.

    The new image is at the heart of new data being released by the SDSS-III collaboration at 217th American Astronomical Society meeting in Seattle. This new SDSS-III data release, along with the previous data releases that it builds upon, gives astronomers the most comprehensive view of the night sky ever made. SDSS data have already been used to discover nearly half a billion astronomical objects, including asteroids, stars, galaxies and distant quasars. The latest, most precise positions, colors and shapes for all these objects are also being released today.

    "This is one of the biggest bounties in the history of science," says Professor Mike Blanton from New York University, who is leading the data archive work in SDSS-III. Blanton and many other scientists have been working for months preparing the release of all this data. This data will be a legacy for the ages, explains Blanton, as previous ambitious sky surveys like the Palomar Sky Survey of the 1950s are still being used today. We expect the SDSS data to have that sort of shelf life," comments Blanton.

    The image was started in 1998 using what was then the world’s largest digital camera, a 138-megapixel imaging detector on the back of a dedicated 2.5-meter telescope at the Apache Point Observatory in New Mexico, USA. Over the last decade, SDSS has scanned a third of the whole sky. Now, this imaging camera is being retired, and will be part of the permanent collection at the Smithsonian in recognition of its contributions to astronomy.

    “It’s been wonderful to see the science results that have come from this camera," says Connie Rockosi, an astronomer from the University of California Santa Cruz, who started working on the camera in the 1990s as an undergraduate student with Jim Gunn, Professor of Astronomy at Princeton University and SDSS-I/II Project Scientist. Rockosi's entire career so far has paralleled the history of the SDSS camera. "It’s a bittersweet feeling to see this camera retired, because I’ve been working with it for nearly 20 years," she says.

    But what next? This enormous image has formed the basis for new surveys of the Universe using the SDSS telescope. These surveys rely on spectra, an astronomical technique that uses instruments to spread the light from a star or galaxy into its component wavelengths. Spectra can be used to find the distances to distant galaxies, and the properties (such as temperature and chemical composition) of different types of stars and galaxies.

    "We have upgraded the existing SDSS instruments, and we are using them to measure distances to over a million galaxies detected in this image," explains David Schlegel, an astronomer from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the Principal Investigator of the new SDSS-III Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey (BOSS). Schlegel explains that measuring distances to galaxies is more time-consuming than simply taking their pictures, but in return, it provides a detailed three-dimensional map of the galaxies' distribution in space.

    BOSS started taking data in 2009 and will continue until 2014, explains Schlegel. Once finished, BOSS will be the largest 3-D map of galaxies ever made, extending the original SDSS galaxy survey to a much larger volume of the Universe. The goal of BOSS is to precisely measure how so-called "dark energy" has changed over the recent history of the Universe. These measurements will help astronomers understand the nature of this mysterious substance. "Dark energy is the biggest conundrum facing science today," says Schlegel, "and the SDSS continues to lead the way in trying to figure out what the heck it is!"

    In addition to BOSS, the SDSS-III collaboration has been studying the properties and motions of hundreds of thousands of stars in the outer parts of our Milky Way Galaxy. The survey, known as the Sloan Extension for Galactic Understanding and Exploration, or SEGUE, started several years ago but has now been completed as part of the first year of SDSS-III.

    In conjunction with the image being released today, astronomers from SEGUE are also releasing the largest map of the outer galaxy ever released. "This map has been used to study the distribution of stars in our galaxy," says Rockosi, the Principal Investigator of SEGUE. "We have found many streams of stars that originally belonged to other galaxies that were torn apart by the gravity of our Milky Way. We've long thought that galaxies evolve by merging with others; the SEGUE observations confirm this basic picture."

    SDSS-III is also undertaking two other surveys of our galaxy through 2014. The first, called MARVELS, will use a new instrument to repeatedly measure spectra for approximately 8,500 nearby stars like our own Sun, looking for the tell-tale wobbles caused by large Jupiter-like planets orbiting them. MARVELS is predicted to discover around a hundred new giant planets, as well as potentially finding a similar number of "brown dwarfs" that are intermediate between the most massive planets and the smallest stars.

    The second survey is the APO Galactic Evolution Experiment (APOGEE), which is using one of the largest infrared spectrographs ever built to undertake the first systematic study of stars in all parts of our galaxy; even stars on the other side of our Galaxy beyond the central bulge. Such stars are traditionally difficult to study as their visible light is obscured by large amounts of dust in the disk of our galaxy. However, by working at longer, infrared wavelengths, APOGEE can study them in great detail, thus revealing their properties and motions to explore how the different components of our galaxy were put together.

    "The SDSS-III is an amazingly diverse project built on the legacy of the original SDSS and SDSS-II surveys," summarizes Nichol. "This image is the culmination of decades of work by hundreds of people, and has already produced many incredible discoveries. Astronomy has a rich tradition of making all such data freely available to the public, and we hope everyone will enjoy it as much as we have."

  • #2


    The Eighth SDSS Data Release (DR8)

    Following the successful practice established by SDSS-I and SDSS-II, SDSS-III will publicly release its raw and reduced data. The Eighth Data Release (DR8), following the Early Data Release and Data Releases 1-7 of SDSS-I/II is now available as of January 2011. The release contains all of the imaging data taken by the SDSS imaging camera (now totalling over 14,000 square degrees of sky), as well as new spectra taken by the SDSS spectrograph during its last year of operations for the SEGUE-2 project. All of the imaging data have been re-reduced using improved data processing pipelines.

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    • #3
      Just imagine using the french fuckers 3D without glasses thing looking at it!
      Last edited by yellowstang; 01-19-2011, 02:28 PM.

      Comment


      • #4
        WTF happened between these dates? Huge time span lost there.

        130 BC: Hipparchus develops the first acccurate star map and star catalogue with over 850 of the brightest stars.

        1609: Gallileo uses a telescope for astronomy

        Comment


        • #5
          Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
          WTF happened between these dates? Huge time span lost there.

          130 BC: Hipparchus develops the first acccurate star map and star catalogue with over 850 of the brightest stars.

          1609: Gallileo uses a telescope for astronomy
          fall of the empires and the dark ages?

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          • #6
            Somebody gave Ole Romer more credit than he deserves.
            "Any dog under 50lbs is a cat and cats are pointless." - Ron Swanson

            Comment


            • #7
              Originally posted by butt86 View Post
              fall of the empires and the dark ages?
              I say rise of the Catholic church actually.

              Comment


              • #8
                Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                WTF happened between these dates? Huge time span lost there.

                130 BC: Hipparchus develops the first acccurate star map and star catalogue with over 850 of the brightest stars.

                1609: Gallileo uses a telescope for astronomy
                Church.
                "Any dog under 50lbs is a cat and cats are pointless." - Ron Swanson

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by poopnut2 View Post
                  Church.
                  Keep up.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    ^^^^^^^
                    see 2 up.
                    Half of history is hiding the past.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                      Keep up.
                      There was a minute difference between our posts. In reality it was probably just a few seconds.
                      "Any dog under 50lbs is a cat and cats are pointless." - Ron Swanson

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        It is amazing to see how long it took for people to get out from under the heel of the church.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by poopnut2 View Post
                          Somebody gave Ole Romer more credit than he deserves.

                          "Ole Christensen Rømer (Danish pronunciation: [o(ː)lə ˈʁœːˀmɐ]; 25 September 1644, Århus – 19 September 1710, Copenhagen) was a Danish astronomer who in 1676 made the first quantitative measurements of the speed of light."


                          Originally posted by mstng86 View Post
                          WTF happened between these dates? Huge time span lost there.
                          LOL. Not much in the western world. The Dark Ages were a bitch.


                          813 A.D. Al Mamon founds the Baghdad school of astronomy.

                          1054 A.D. Chinese astronomers observe supernova in Taurus.

                          1120 A.D. Construction of an observatory in Cairo was begun in 1120 A.D. This is possibly the first observatory built in Medieval Islam

                          1420 A.D. Ulugh Beg (1394-1449), noted astronomer, had an observatory built at Samarkand in central Asia


                          Then you hit the rennaisance and Copernicus (wrong as he may have been), Brahe, Gallileo, Kepler, etc all pop up

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                          • #14
                            dang, space is pretty big huh?

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Strychnine View Post

                              "Ole Christensen Rømer (Danish pronunciation: [o(ː)lə ˈʁœːˀmɐ]; 25 September 1644, Århus – 19 September 1710, Copenhagen) was a Danish astronomer who in 1676 made the first quantitative measurements of the speed of light."




                              LOL. Not much in the western world. The Dark Ages were a bitch.


                              813 A.D. Al Mamon founds the Baghdad school of astronomy.

                              1054 A.D. Chinese astronomers observe supernova in Taurus.

                              1120 A.D. Construction of an observatory in Cairo was begun in 1120 A.D. This is possibly the first observatory built in Medieval Islam

                              1420 A.D. Ulugh Beg (1394-1449), noted astronomer, had an observatory built at Samarkand in central Asia


                              Then you hit the rennaisance and Copernicus (wrong as he may have been), Brahe, Gallileo, Kepler, etc all pop up
                              Romer came up with a formula that HELPED other astromers determine the speed of light. If I remember right Romer thought it to be around 10x the speed of sound.
                              "Any dog under 50lbs is a cat and cats are pointless." - Ron Swanson

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