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Incredible Images of the Sun

shelterit writes "A new swedish telescope facility in La Palma uses a new technology to remove the blurriness of the atmosphere to snap new and astonishingly sharp images of the sun. Want to have a closer look at the surface of it? Reminds me of paintings I did as a kid."

239 comments

  1. Hmm by veeoh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Still not as good as space based, but a damn sight cheaper! :)

    \/eeoh

    1. Re:Hmm by MtViewGuy · · Score: 5, Informative

      While this new system works great for the visible spectrum of the Sun's output, you still want a space-based observatory to monitor the Sun's output in the other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum. That's why satellites like SOHO are still important.

    2. Re:Hmm by CharlieO · · Score: 0

      And the ill-fated CLUSTER mission that we lost on the first Arianne 5 launch

    3. Re:Hmm by teridon · · Score: 5, Interesting
      On the contrary:

      The filaments' newly revealed dark cores are seen to be thousands of kilometers long but only about 100 kilometers wide. Resolving features 100 kilometers wide or less is a milestone in solar astronomy and has been achieved here using sophisticated adaptive optics, digital image stacking, and processing techniques to counter the blurring effect of Earth's atmosphere. At optical wavelengths, these images are sharper than even current space-based solar observatories can produce.

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    4. Re:Hmm by two_ply · · Score: 4, Insightful
      "these images are sharper than even current space-based solar observatories can produce. "

      By using new technology earth based observatories have made an advance over *current* space based observatories. Doesn't it follow that by using the same advances space based observatories will exceed earth based ones once they can be implemented? Also, they're be no need for correcting for the atmosphere ...

    5. Re:Hmm by teridon · · Score: 2

      No, it doesn't follow because the advances don't apply to spaced-based observatories. The images are sharper because of 1) adaptive optics 2) the observatory has a larger mirror(s). The only way a space-based observatory is going to get better images is a larger mirror. And, as you pointed out, there's no need for adaptive optics in space.

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    6. Re:Hmm by tdye · · Score: 2

      It sure is a good thing for the Swedes that they don't have to defend themselves, and thus have the luxury of gazing up at the sun while other countries make sure no one's flying hostile airborne targets over their observatories.

      How is that contrast interesting again?

    7. Re:Hmm by Mxyzptlk · · Score: 1

      It's interesting, because it entices you to come out in the open, so others can see you for what you are, and mark you as a Slashdot-foe. Thanks for taking the bait!

    8. Re:Hmm by The+Dobber · · Score: 2


      Actually adaptive optics in space is nothing new. Since weight is a major factor in placing any payload in orbit, optical face sheets are made as thin as possible. Once freed of gravitational constraints, the optics will deform. Thermal deformations also come into play.

    9. Re:Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure I understand what you mean... after all, if the US wasn't such a bully on the international playground it wouldn't have to have a military anywhere near the size of what it is today. Also, Sweden does have an army, I know that during the cold war it was a pretty strong and modern one, not sure about the state of it now though...

    10. Re:Hmm by Peterus7 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      What amazes me is that in essence each one of those bright cells are as big as Texas, and that the level of resolution is so fuggin high. How did they get it that sharp?

    11. Re:Hmm by tdye · · Score: 2

      I stand so marked.

      Or something... Man, you people are annoying.

  2. Wow by martingunnarsson · · Score: 0

    Darn cool, or should I say hot, pictures!

    --
    Martin
    1. Re:Wow by Jugalator · · Score: 3, Funny

      Darn cool, or should I say hot, pictures!

      The web server seem to be running "hot" as well. :-)

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  3. GIFs??? by ergo98 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What in the world are they thinking putting them up as 3MB GIFs? I understand the need for super accuracy for some purposes, hence the need for lossless TIFFs, but there should be JPEGs for people who don't need perfect reproductions: The smooth gradients lend themselves to JPEG compression.

    1. Re:GIFs??? by teridon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Here's a JPEG.

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    2. Re:GIFs??? by bogado · · Score: 2

      Also gif are not as lossless as people think, people tend to forget that color resolution is very important and gif only have 256 of them.

      --
      []'s Victor Bogado da Silva Lins

      ^[:wq

    3. Re:GIFs??? by jdavidb · · Score: 2

      Well, given the beating their site is getting right now, I'll bet they wish they had used a better format. :)

    4. Re:GIFs??? by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 2

      Yeah, but it's the sun. So about 254 of those colors are going to be some shade of yellow.

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    5. Re:GIFs??? by The+Original+Yama · · Score: 3, Informative

      At the very least they could've used PNGs. GIFs are evil.

    6. Re:GIFs??? by frankman · · Score: 1

      Say hello to my new desktop image!

      --
      Rats cry when i tell them about my day - Dilbert
    7. Re:GIFs??? by ergo98 · · Score: 1

      You mean like this colour palette that I got from hitachi_4_color.gif.

    8. Re:GIFs??? by The+Fun+Guy · · Score: 3, Funny

      OH MY GOD!!!!! LOOK AT IT, JUST LOOK AT IT!!!!!!!

      You can see all the horns at the top! Just above the central blackness! It's Satan and his minions! Reverend Bobby was RIGHT! It's the SCIENTISTS and all of their TECNOLOGY have finally!!! opened the DOOR TO HELL!!!!! He said they put DAEMONS in our computers, and on the InterNet, but I didn't believe!

      Oh, JESUS, I am heartily sorry for the sins I have committed, and I reject the **EVIL** TECNOLOGY of the SCIENTISTS and their DAEMONS! Have Mercy On ME, oh LORD, and on my brother, Willum Jeffry Scraggins, who now lives in New York under the name of Will Craig, and also on his wife Rachel (though she is an Unbeliever, if you know what I mean).

      --
      The man who does not read good books has no advantage over the man who cannot read them. - Mark Twain
    9. Re:GIFs??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't that be "Oh, JEBUS"?

    10. Re:GIFs??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm... Yes... Well... Exactly what are you trying to tell us?

    11. Re:GIFs??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wow, you're an ass.

    12. Re:GIFs??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is confirming what the poster above him said, brainiac.

    13. Re:GIFs??? by thesadmac · · Score: 0

      A score 2: funny ass though.

    14. Re:GIFs??? by Fishstick · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Heh, thought the same thing in about .0001 second from seeing that image.

      But, when I loaded it up, the color is just too intense. I tend to like softer blue patterns for my desktop (NT/W2k "Soap Bubbles" usually does the trick).

      I used to have one that was rendered in blue (think it was an x-ray image or something) of the whole sun, made a nice soothing wallpaper on my CDE desktop. Wonder if I can find that one again (think it was originally linked from Blues News).

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

    15. Re:GIFs??? by Fishstick · · Score: 4, Interesting

      er, sorry to reply to my own post...

      APOD: January 6, 1997 - Blue Sun Glaring

      Explanation: The Sun is a bubbling ball of extremely hot gas. In this false-color picture, light blue regions are extremely hot - over 1 million degrees, while dark blue regions are slightly cooler. The camera filter used was highly sensitive to the emission of highly charged iron ions, which trace the magnetic field of the Sun. The rich structure of the image shows the great complexity of the Sun's inner corona. A small active region can be seen just to the right and above center. This picture was taken in ultraviolet (extremely blue) light by the Extreme-ultraviolet Imaging Telescope (EIT) on board the Solar and Heliospheric Observatory (SOHO) spacecraft, which is orbiting the Sun just ahead of the Earth, at the L1 point. SOHO was launched in 1995 and will continually monitor the Sun for several years.

      I just think that's one of the coolest things I've ever seen. I'll use that for my desktop again, now that I've found it again.

      --

      There is much cruelty in the universe, John.
      Yeah, we seem to have the tour map.

    16. Re:GIFs??? by Bender_ · · Score: 1
      Also gif are not as lossless as people think, people tend to forget that color resolution is very important and gif only have 256 of them

      Not true - GIF does also allow lossless 24Bit color compression.

    17. Re:GIFs??? by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 1

      I agree. PNG is a great file format, without the evils of GIF. It also has the ability to do 24 bit, though that probably doesn't matter in this case.

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    18. Re:GIFs??? by mlofdahl · · Score: 1

      Sorry about that. We did not expect people to link directly to the download page, that we set up primarly for the media. There are jpegs available from our home page.
      Just goes to show that our expertise is in other areas than web publishing...
      /Mats

  4. No wonder... by rovingeyes · · Score: 1

    Sun burns are such a menace!

  5. The sun?! Where?! by Henriok · · Score: 5, Funny

    I live in Sweden and I haven't seen the sun for ages. If my calendar is correct.. i might see the sun again in 3-4 months time. I really don't know if I can stand it that long.

    --

    - Henrik

    - when the Shadows descend -
    1. Re:The sun?! Where?! by Myco · · Score: 5, Funny
      Not only do you live in Sweden, but you post on Slashdot. No wonder you never see the sun.

      Of course, I also live in Sweden and post on Slashdot, so I know that of which I speak.

    2. Re:The sun?! Where?! by juhaz · · Score: 1

      Hear, hear!

      It truly does suck to live this north.

    3. Re:The sun?! Where?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just wait until July when you only get an hour or two of darkness. Now to me, THAT sucks.

  6. Also on MSNBC by Alcazar · · Score: 5, Informative

    MSNBC posted this article last night http://www.msnbc.com/news/834647.asp It might be more reachable...

    1. Re:Also on MSNBC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'll pretty much be the sun in a few million years, after it prolapses into a black hole.

  7. re Paintings as a kid by Sad+Loser · · Score: 5, Funny

    you obviously didn't live in the UK then. My paintings always had that 'grey sky' look.

    --
    Humorous signatures are over-rated.
    1. Re:re Paintings as a kid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      UK isn't that bad, go to Denmark, I bet the danish people invented rain; damnit, how is it even possible to rain for 3 months without a single break? Damn Odense, this was a couple of years ago, but still, I'm never going back there.

  8. Buried in the site by dubbayu_d_40 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Took me awhile to find out how it works. In a nutshell: "The adaptive mirror actually changes shape 1000 times a second in order to adjust for the rapidly changing blurring of the image. Finally, we are using techniques to further sharpen the images after they have been captured by electronic cameras. In the best images the resolution is close to 0.1 arcseconds. This is a factor of 1200 better than 20/20 vision."

    1. Re:Buried in the site by coryboehne · · Score: 2

      A factor of 1200 better than 20/20 vision? Hmmm, wonder if there would be someway to adapt this for other (read military, then trickle to the public) purposes.... I mean, really, imagine a soldier wearing a small set of optics that are able to allow him to clearly see a tank at 100 miles, or even better, allow a tank to see a tank at 100 miles, planes could benefit too. Of course I personally would get a kick out of a nice pair of super-glasses with this tech enabled so that I could finally read those pesky road signs at a mile or two away :)

    2. Re:Buried in the site by Daniel+Dvorkin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Well, I think the size of the mirror used might make it impractical for a soldier to carry one of these things around in a pair of goggles. ;) Also, it's a lot harder to apply adaptive optical techniques to lenses than to mirrors -- I work for a microscopy company (not as an optical engineer, granted, but that's what a lot of my coworkers do, and I hear them bitching) and we've had a hell of a time applying adaptive optical techniques to anything -- we have one product based on this idea that's only started shipping this year. I suspect the problems with lens-based telescopes and binoculars would be even worse, since the lenses in question are so much bigger.

      That being said, I would be very surprised if there weren't military spy satellites, and perhaps reconnaisance planes, already using this.

      --
      The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
    3. Re:Buried in the site by JeffSh · · Score: 1

      at 100 miles you're going to have major issues with curvature of the earth and terrain. enhanced imaging is not very practical for battlefield use, unless it comes in the form of top down tactical information.

    4. Re:Buried in the site by dubbayu_d_40 · · Score: 1

      It's a simple concept - so no doubt it will happen. The barrier is the processing power to combine these images in real time. I'll be excited when it finds it's way to my video camera. Combine that with nightshot and a dark infrared filter and a pool, and oh yeah baby ;-)

    5. Re:Buried in the site by LHorstman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      For distances of 100 miles that may be true. However we really do need enhanced imaging on the battlefield. As the gunner of an M1A1 Abrams main battle tank, I can kill a target at 3500 meters, but I can't tell what it is. For all I know it could be a friendly vehicle. At 3500 meters it's very difficult to tell the difference between an allied Canadian Leopard 2 and an Iraqi T-72. Recent upgrades to the M1A2's include higher power lenses (up to 50x), which help for identification, but remove your view of most of the battlefield. A very sharp image would have a huge benefit in preventing fratricide. Certainly we do not need the extreme image enhancing done in this article, but something scaled down would be great.

    6. Re:Buried in the site by scotch · · Score: 2

      The military has been using this technology for ages. HTH.

      --
      XML causes global warming.
    7. Re:Buried in the site by inio · · Score: 2

      I believe they're referring to Adaptive Optics. You can find out more about AO here: What Is Adaptive Optics?

  9. I see by djweis · · Score: 5, Funny

    You can't fool us, that's really one of van Gogh's sunflower paintings.

    1. Re:I see by foxtrot · · Score: 2

      I'm not as familiar with Van Gogh, but I was thinking it looked like an orange version of "Starry Night".

      Probably something about it being a star, though...

  10. Bloody slashdotting by prichardson · · Score: 2, Informative

    Maybe slashdot could offer mirroring of websites that need it before they link them. CNN and NYTimes might be able to handle the extra traffic but a geocities page will not.

    --
    Help I'm a rock.
  11. Re:Incredible images of the moon by Morky · · Score: 1

    Was that the Sea of Tranquility?

  12. Slashdotted. by mazur · · Score: 2

    So will some kind hearts who can still access it copy the pages FTTB? I would myself, but I can't get in...

    But it's nice the general scientific community still shares its assets, instead of copyrighting it and hiding it behind massive fees, like Craig Venter did.

    <Offtopic>
    Now if only I could find a geological map of the Netherlands without the usual atlas texts all over them, so i can make a nice RT2 simulation of the Dutch railways growth since trains got invented. ;-)
    </Offtopic>

    Stefan

    --
    The truth shall make you fret. (Ankh-Morpork tImes motto)
    1. Re:Slashdotted. by bluFox · · Score: 4, Interesting

      You can access the first image here
      sunspot
      you should do it fast though , it is my home machine and i cant hold on for long.

      ill try to put the other page as sun.html

      --
      ~561
  13. Re:Thanks michael by Zeddicus_Z · · Score: 2

    Hey, at least he didnt link the 3MB TIFF...

    Err... Oops

    --
    Janie took my gun...
  14. Appology by InsaneCreator · · Score: 5, Funny

    Sunset will be canceled tonight, due to the slashdotting of the sun.

    1. Re:Appology by tanveer1979 · · Score: 2
      "Appology"

      Sorry for the spelling mistake my concious is moonlight powered.

      --
      My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
      FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
    2. Re:Appology by jsse · · Score: 1

      The Sunset can be proceeded as schedule. For some reason the site which host the sun survived slashdotting, regardless of the transferring of huge images. :)

    3. Re:Appology by The+Original+Yama · · Score: 2

      So we can have multiple sunsets? :)

    4. Re:Appology by argStyopa · · Score: 2

      Adaptive Mirrors to make high resolution pics of the sun available, made available by Adaptive Mirrors.

      Isn't this one of thos I was able, era I saw Elba thingys?

      It's kinda mirrory all by itself!

      --
      -Styopa
    5. Re:Appology by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Sunset will be canceled tonight, due to the slashdotting of the sun.

      Do you mean the Sun in the sky or the Sun in the server room? I think it is an HP, not a Sun, BTW.

    6. Re:Appology by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is a horrible joke. Thanks for the laugh.

  15. Summer Fun by nukey56 · · Score: 5, Funny

    If you look real close on that image, a little to the left of the giant black spot, you can just about see the Old Navy crew in their cargo shorts. Glad to know that advertisement worked.

  16. another link by tanveer1979 · · Score: 5, Informative

    In case the above site gets roasted, space.com also has pics and article.
    This article has the links.You can also zoom in and use the viewer.

    --
    My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
    FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
  17. Just what we need by 91degrees · · Score: 5, Funny

    We've been to the moon, and Mars will be next, followed by Venus, but what will we do when we've run out of planets? Clearly the option is the Sun.

    Photos like these will show us where the potential landing sites are. Very useful since the lander will have to find somewhere that's not only flat but free of excessive RF noise so that we can communicate with Earth.

    So, obviously, someone will ask - How can we possible build something to get to the sun? Well, this is quite simple, Firstly we use regrigeration devices. These will require some considerable energy, as well as a decent fusion power source to keep them going. Secondly, we avoif reflective surfaces. The other thing to remember is that we only need to travel during the night. During the day is when the sun is hottest, so travel at night should help cool us considerably. This will require better propulsion mechanisms that can do the bulk of the travelling in the 12 hours of night.

    1. Re:Just what we need by emir · · Score: 2

      i hope this is a joke heh. how can you travel to sun "at night"? night exists because of earth rotation. when you are traveling to sun its "day" all the time..... then sun is gas giant there is no surface, density increases all the time but there is no surface as on earth....

      --
      -- http://electronicintifada.net --
    2. Re:Just what we need by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Have you been there? If not, then how the hell do you know what the surface is like?

    3. Re:Just what we need by CoffeeJedi · · Score: 2

      Oh come on moderators! The previous comment was funny! I don't know why it got "flamebait"... its a high-tech update of the old "Polish Astronauts" joke.

      --
      May you be touched by His Noodly Appendage. RAmen.
    4. Re:Just what we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no

      he isn't joking

      idiot

    5. Re:Just what we need by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are right that the sun is "on" all the time so approaching during night wouldn't help. The solution is of course to approach the sun from the back.

  18. Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    The images are slashdotted, so I've provided a mirror. Go outside (that's through the door over there, pale face) and look up.

    1. Re:Mirror by hexxx · · Score: 4, Funny

      Your comment is too US-centric. It's already dark here.

      --
      IVAN Nethack is not the king anymore.
    2. Re:Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would I want to look at my living room ceiling?

    3. Re:Mirror by rufo · · Score: 2, Funny

      What, you don't have a moon? He did say a mirror, after all...

      --
      My English teacher once told me that two positives don't make a negative. Two words for her: Yeah, right.
    4. Re:Mirror by WeeLad · · Score: 2, Funny
      You may have to wait a bit for it to load

      --
      Seriously, Don't take anything I say seriously.
    5. Re:Mirror by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but in Finland don't you only get about 4 hours of daylight at this time of year?

    6. Re:Mirror by jmb_no · · Score: 1

      > You may have to wait a bit for it to load

      Yes, especially up here in the arctic.

  19. Re:You're not alone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ROFLMAO - mod this little beauty up...

  20. Where is the 1600x1200 version? by GnomeKing · · Score: 1

    I mean, its not as if the sun isnt big enough to take a photo with that resolution..

    I just happen to think that some of those images would make really nice wallpaper :P

    1. Re:Where is the 1600x1200 version? by GnomeKing · · Score: 3, Informative

      apparently its here...

      whoops

    2. Re:Where is the 1600x1200 version? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Excellent, but I can't stand that staring face in the upper left corner. ;-)

  21. mirror! by caveat · · Score: 5, Informative

    well, at least the closeup of a sunspot and one of the filaments. but please be nice, it's a new powermac, i don't want it melted just yet :P

    --

    Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
    1. Re:mirror! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Beautiful picture, and good machine/bandwidth !

      Greetings from .cisco.com ;)

    2. Re:mirror! by caveat · · Score: 2

      *bows* thankyouveerymuch, tritium's a dual 1.25ghz g4, it should be able to take somewhat of a pounding.
      of course we shall see what optimium online has to say about this tomorrow... ;)

      --

      Facts do not cease to exist because they are ignored. - Aldous Huxley
    3. Re:mirror! by shadowbearer · · Score: 1


      Y'know, I went looking for the pix from this post late in the
      day (damn work anyway :0 ) and you had the first links that
      weren't still timing out.

      Thanks, dude.

      SB

      --
      It's old. The more humans I meet, the more I like my cats. At least they are honest.
  22. Finally by Crasoum · · Score: 2, Funny

    I don't need to burn my pupils to see a good view of the sun from the earth. But that spf 300 lotion burnt more then the sun ever did...

    1. Re:Finally by affenmann · · Score: 2

      > burn my pupils to see a good view of the sun from the earth
      Bah, burn your pupils. What sort of teacher are you?

  23. Do you have a screen wipe? by 91degrees · · Score: 3, Funny

    The image looks a bit cloudy. I think there's something on the monitor.

  24. archh. the darkness by selderrr · · Score: 1, Redundant

    fuck... we slashdotted the sun !

  25. Boneheads by Eudial · · Score: 1

    What bonehead looks in to the sun with a telescope... seriously? well, one born every minute.

    --
    GAAH! MY PRINTER IS ON FIRE!!! PUT IT OUT! PUT IT OUT!
  26. extra link. by budalite · · Score: 4, Informative

    Also available at APOD - Astronomy Picture of the Day . Enjoy.

  27. Great for the people still around from the 60s by iamwoodyjones · · Score: 1

    ...who spent many a days staring directly into the sun on one of their trips. Now they can say, "Wow man, this really is a better picture. oooooo."

    1. Re:Great for the people still around from the 60s by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      spent many a days staring directly into the sun

      No, they can't

  28. Site is slow -- here's the content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Here are the images from the site -- a picture of the Sun:

    ____
    / \
    | |
    | |
    \____/

    Hope that helps to beat the Slashdotting.

    1. Re:Site is slow -- here's the content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Dang, couldn't get it perfectly right (used the "code" selection to get past the lameness filter). Maybe that bit at the top could represent a solar flare... :)

      Anyone make a proper circle?

    2. Re:Site is slow -- here's the content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      o

    3. Re:Site is slow -- here's the content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Will someone with a functioning sense of humour please mod the parent up? That is the funniest thing I have seen all day on slashdot, maybe the funniest post all week. So much fun from a single character post!

    4. Re:Site is slow -- here's the content by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you are misinterpreting the data. the feature in the top left is a protuberance.

  29. Wow...that went fast. by Mac+Degger · · Score: 5, Funny

    site's burnt already...looks like that's what you get for staring into the sun.

    --
    -- Waht? Tehr's a preveiw buottn?
  30. It looks like... by Ececheira · · Score: 1

    ...an impressionist painting!

    Has anyone else noticed that the texture of the sun looks like the brush strokes on a Van Gogh?

  31. /.'ed by Enzo1977 · · Score: 1

    Thank you slashdot-effect.

    Try this link to take a peek at the sun.

    Closer Look

    --
    I hate all sigs, even this one.
  32. Unwarranted by CharlieO · · Score: 3, Interesting

    And this is Michael's fault how?

    Seriously they chose to put large size images linked from a press release - I mean they're not even deep links, nor is this one near the bottom of the page. Its probably one of the most likely links everyone will click on if they read the story. Its linked from a press release they expect this too be read, its not like we slashdotted a tiny departmental server.

    Does moving it from a 2 click (slashdot story - press release image - gif) to 1 click[1] (slashdot story) really justify a personal broadside against the editorial integerity of one the slashdot team?

    Comment on the fact that maybe they should be warned so they remove the high res links until the slashdotting is over, maybe comment on the poor web design approach of the academic team involved, any number of these are valid responses to this story.

    Your response adds nothing to the story, nor is what I would expect from someone (judging by you name and email) who is experienced at proffesionally critiquing and assess others work in thier career. Or do peer reviews in Academia these days descend to personal attacks, unwarranted sarcasm and flamewars too?

    It seems a strange contrast to your statement about stupidity on the site, did you mean the content of the site or the quality and relevance of the posts on it?

    [1]1-Click is of course patented by Amazon, so we must be careful...

  33. Surfaces of extrasolar planets by heroine · · Score: 2

    If they're really seeing the actual surface features of the sun to this detail without synthesizing data then maybe the same technique can be applied to extrasolar planets to image details as small as life forms.

    1. Re:Surfaces of extrasolar planets by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh Hunh, the details you're looking at are measured in 100's of kilometers per pixel.
      That would have to be one fsking huge planet and even more gargantuan "life from" to image using this kind of piddly technique!
      Clue stick....head....apply vigorously!

  34. Adaptive Optics by Hawaiian+Lion · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The technology used by this telescope to counter the effects of the atmosphere in measurements is called adaptive optics. This is the first application I know of for adaptive optics on a solar telescope.

    This technology has been around for awhile, and was first seriously developed by the military at the Starfire Optical Range .

    Recently it has been used in such telescope projects as the WM Keck Observatory and Gemini Project . I know AO is also used for measurement of eye aberrations, with projects being conducted at several Universities. For more information about Adaptive Optics, I suggest the Center for Adaptive Optics

    My personal experience with AO was as an intern for Gemini this past summer. I helped write parallel code for a program that simulates current and future adaptive optics systems planned for the next generation of extremely large telescopes.

    1. Re:Adaptive Optics by CharlieO · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And the most fun to be had with an Adaptive Optics system is if it uses a laser generated guide star.

      Then you can chuck a frisbee like object through the beam and watch it get zapped :)

      Did I say this was seriously frowned on, I think I should :)

      Adaptive Optics in a Nutshell:

      1) You use a single point source as a reference.
      2) You know the aberation caused by the atmosphere will spread the point image when you receive it.
      3) You know that as your source is a point source, then the resultant spread in your image is entirely due to aberation, so use the image to calculate the Point Spread Function
      4) Using the PSF apply a correction to the light path by altering something in the imaging system, usually a mirror.
      5) Repeat several hundred times a second

      Of course the great side effect is this also removes distortion caused by the imaging system itself, allowing you to use bigger mirrors with a lower tolerance than you otherwise might be able to do.

      Originally point sources were strong and predictable stars in the field of view that you wanted - hence the term 'guide stars'

      With a laser generated guide star you project a spot onto the upper surface of the atmosphere with a powerful laser of an appropriate frequency - close to your obsering frequency, but far enough out that you don't effect the observation. The subtlety here is to account for the fact that the point source will be spread twice, once on the way up and once on the way down.

      Anyone working in AO I apologise to for the somewhat oversimplification - follow the links in the parent to better details if your interest is fired.

    2. Re:Adaptive Optics by vinlud · · Score: 1

      Adaptive optics is also used in the VLT's on mount Paranal: http://www.eso.org/projects/aot/

      A nice introduction into AO: http://www.eso.org/projects/aot/introduction.html

      --
      Repeat after me: We are all individuals
    3. Re:Adaptive Optics by mlofdahl · · Score: 1

      When we first took our adaptive optics (AO) system online in 1999 with our old 50 cm telescope (now replaced with the new 1-meter telescope) it was actually the second really working AO system on a solar telescope. The first one, beating us with a couple of months) was installed at Sacramento Peak in New Mexico. /Mats

    4. Re:Adaptive Optics by mlofdahl · · Score: 1

      The thing that makes adaptive optics (AO) for a solar telescope trickier than for night-time astronomy is that we don't have a point source. Instead we have to calculate the shape of the corrective mirror from the low-contrast features in the solar photosphere. This is computationally a much harder problem, so we basically had to wait for processing speed to get better and cheaper before we could do it. /Mats

    5. Re:Adaptive Optics by CharlieO · · Score: 2

      Thanks for that - for the life of me I couldn't get my head around how adaptive optics were working for solar imaging.

      I thought you might be using very powerful laser - which sounded like a lot of fun!!

      From what you describe it sounds more like a video system 'fuzzy logic' focus system, though I can appreciate that this is a much greater challenge!

  35. Look at art! by WhiteBandit · · Score: 3, Funny

    Well now the fun with these super detailed pictures is to see if we can pick out images!

    If you scroll down to the "bottom" of that image, line yourself up with the very top of that monstrous sunspot and then cut directly left, you can see a nearly perfect image of a face.

    *sigh*
    Now I guess we sit back and wait for the conspiracy theories to fly.

    1. Re:Look at art! by The+Original+Yama · · Score: 4, Funny

      ...cue for some fanatic to proclaim, "It's the face of {Jesus|Mary|Muhammad|Buddha|etc.}!!!", followed by some cheesy explanation like "God is light, and He creates life. Just like the Sun!!!"

      It's a miracle!!!

    2. Re:Look at art! by JimPooley · · Score: 5, Funny

      Of course there's a face in the sun. Have you never seen 'Teletubbies'?

      Seriously though, this is just another example of how the human brain is hot-wired to see faces in everything - even a colon, a dash and a bracket.

      --

      "Information wants to be paid"
    3. Re:Look at art! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must not be from South America, if you were you would have said that it was the face of Jesus :-)

    4. Re:Look at art! by Bunji+X · · Score: 1

      Oh, great! Now we now that there is intelligent life on both Mars and the Sun! Soon they will probably even find intelligent life on earth!

      --
      ---
      The combined human population is enough to feed every living tiger for app. 28000 years.
    5. Re:Look at art! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eh-Oh Tinky-Winky!

    6. Re:Look at art! by lommer · · Score: 2

      "this is just another example of how the human brain is hot-wired to see faces in everything - even a colon"

      If you take this out of context, as I did when I first read that, it sounds really wrong. Be on the lookout for goatse.cx replies...

  36. Cooling question by forged · · Score: 4, Interesting
    How does the cameras sensors not melt and achieve good accuracy by staring into the sun ? Surely they must be cooled off, but how ? The overclocking crowd here must have some insights !

    Btw, I tried to stare at the sun once when I was a kid, that was stupid. I was told too late that one can go blind for doing that -- that must explain the glasses today...

    1. Re:Cooling question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not sure how they cool the sensors; very large image scale at the detector focus may help to reduce the energy dump. The image tend to be through very narrow-band filters which exclude most of the light.

      Solar telescopes often have beam-paths enclosed and evacuated. If you leave air in the beam it heats up, convects and ruins the image. C.f. dome seeing in night-time telescopes.

    2. Re:Cooling question by Squeak · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Increasing the aperture of a telescope has two effects:
      More light is collected. (Since astronomical telescopes are usually used to look at dim objects this is normally considered an advantage.)
      To reduce the diffraction effects and so increase the spatial resolution.

      When observing the sun, the second of these is still required but the first is a problem. The sun provides too much light, especially in the infrared, to observe safely.
      The solution is to place a filter over the front of the telescope which cuts down the amount of light entering the scope. This reduction generally needs to be of the order of 1:1,000,000.
      Filters at the back end of the telescope, directly in front of the eyepiece/camera, are not safe. All the heat from the sun passes the scope through and is focused through this small filter. They can then easily crack or melt.

      Safety notice: The only safe filters for observing the sun are those designed for the job. They are usually thin plastic, sometimes glass, with a metal coating on both sides. Always check the filter is firmly fixed in place and has no scratches or pinholes. It is this filter type which was used in the eclipse safety glasses a few years back. When observing by eye, with no telescope, binoculars or other magnification, welder's No 14 glass or fully exposed and developed black and white film negatives are also safe. (Not colour film or b&w film developed with a colour process - it is the deposited metallic silver used in the b&w process which provides the protection.) NOTHING else is considered safe.

      You can get cooled CCD cameras, and the astrophotographical community has been using them for years. (Well, those than can afford them anyway.) The cooling is required to reduce the 'dark current' within the camera itself during long exposures, not to remove incoming heat.

      --
      This sig is a figment of your imagination.
    3. Re:Cooling question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, as part of the overclocking crowd I can assure you that they either use a Peltier Cooler or an 80mm fan coupled with an all copper Heat Sink directly on the telescope. They would have used a water cooling system or a refrigerant based system, but they couldn't afford it.

      Sometimes, for penis size value, they adjust the telescope out of spec.

    4. Re:Cooling question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was told too late that one can go blind for doing that

      Really? I was told the same thing about masturbating...

      Then I found this

    5. Re:Cooling question by rockerduck · · Score: 2, Informative

      How does the cameras sensors not melt and achieve good accuracy by staring into the sun ? Surely they must be cooled off, but how ?

      Oddly enough, the CCD's generally are not cooled at all. The amount of light falling on the detector is actually not that great. Remember that each pixel corresponds to less than 0.1 x 0.1 arcsec, which means it covers about one-billionth of the solar surface (and hence the flux is one billion times less than integrated sunlight). Then you start taking very small slices in wavelength (0.01 nm or less, compared to the 100's of nanometers over the sun's emission peak in the visible wavelengths). Toss in a polarizer too (though they didn't use one in these observations), and next thing you know, you are running out of photons! That's why we need a big (by solar telescope standards) 4-meter telescope like the ATST ( http://atst.nso.edu).

      The exposure times in observations like these are also very short, on the order of 20 milliseconds or less, so there is no time for the dark current to build up during a long exposure (this is why nighttime CCD's, with exposures of minutes or hours, are often cooled). For some applications, even simple video rate CCD's can be used (the problem often being the small number of pixels).

      As you might surmise, even if the detector isn't getting hit with that many photons, a lot of extra light is going through the telescope. Getting rid of waste heat IS a problem, and, as is the case with the Swedish Tower, often the main body of the telescope (entrance aperture -> main mirror -> instrument feed) is kept in a vacuum to reduce currents from heated air in the optical path. However, the Swedish Tower appears to be at the limit for the size of the entrance window (must be of optical quality and with minimal stress) that can be used (the entrance window is the size of the main lens on the Yerkes telescope - the world's biggest refractor). That is why bigger telescopes like the GREGOR (1.5 m) and ATST (4 m) will be open, like nighttime telescopes, and will have to use different methods of thermal control. We can't go bigger than four meters now because of the limits of our thermal control capabilities.

    6. Re:Cooling question by forged · · Score: 1

      Hey, that was an awesome explanation. Thanks!

    7. Re:Cooling question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can get cooled CCD cameras, and the astrophotographical community has been using them for years. (Well, those than can afford them anyway.) The cooling is required to reduce the 'dark current' within the camera itself during long exposures, not to remove incoming heat.

      Do astronomers have to add the prefix "dark" to everything they're not sure about? :-)

    8. Re:Cooling question by Squeak · · Score: 1

      Dark current is the unwanted signal noise leaking into the CCD detectors when they are 'dark'. i.e. not illuminated. One source of this noise is thermal effects, which is reduced by cooling the detector. Peltier devices and a large heatsink can reduce the temperature by about 30 degC. Liquid N2 is somewhat more drastic.

      --
      This sig is a figment of your imagination.
  37. Wish it was live. by torpor · · Score: 2

    It'd make the dopest desktop wallpaper to have these closeup images live, near-realtime, on my OSX desktop.

    Then I could actually finally have a decent use for transparent Term windows, I guess... :)

    --
    ; -- the corruption of government starts with its secrets. a truly free people keep no secrets. --
    1. Re:Wish it was live. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      .. and name your machine "Ra"?

  38. oooh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Huge stretches of flame and explosions... and a dark hole as well... I see that all the time, strangely enough, it's always about 4 hours after i've eaten Taco Bell food!

  39. continuing from the parent by bluFox · · Score: 1

    sun.html
    see this too space.com
    -----

    --
    ~561
  40. Hubble? by digidave · · Score: 2

    Question: Why can't they point Hubble at the Sun and get even better photos? Is Hubble not equipped for such a task?

    --
    The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
    1. Re:Hubble? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. It's not. If you pointed hubble at the sun, hubble would fry its optics. The sun is wayyyyyyyy
      to close to the sun, and hubble is specifically made to grab all the light it can. What happens to you after you look at the sun, from being in total darkness for a while? See.. =)

    2. Re:Hubble? by teridon · · Score: 5, Informative

      Because Hubble is not designed to point at the sun. Thermally, Hubble was designed so that one side of the telescope is always pointed towards the sun. For thermally stability it must always remain that way. Are you going to personally replace Hubble's primary mirror when it cracks due to solar heating?

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    3. Re:Hubble? by hplasm · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I agree. The sun is wayyyyyyyy to close to the sun. Can't get much closer....

      --
      ...and he grinned, like a fox eating shit out of a wire brush.
    4. Re:Hubble? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you going to personally replace Hubble's primary mirror when it cracks

      HELL YES, if they'd let me!

      Perhaps you missed the primary audience of this site..

    5. Re:Hubble? by gorilla · · Score: 2

      Also the sensors would be overloaded by the brightness of the sun. It can only just handle the brightness of the earth.

    6. Re:Hubble? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Perhaps you missed the primary audience of this site.."

      What...pathetic, no-life, loser, zealous faggots that live in their parents' basements? What do they have to anything?

  41. GIFs quite common in sat imaging by CharlieO · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From my days doing Earth Observation Science (EOS) I recall that a lot of satellite imaging, whether astronomical or remote sensing, seemed to follow a de-facto standard of a 512 x 512 x 8bit image tile per channel on the instrument.

    GIFs were often used because it is a very stable way of doing lossless compression at 8bit, stable as in almost any image program can read them.

    This is not the case with TIFFs as there are a number of variants and options in the file format.

    TIFFs are however a better medium for storage of composite images, either spatially or spectorally (montages or multichannel pseudo colour in english).

    Due to its general lack of use as a data storage format most of the tools I used/wrote to proccess image data files generally did not have JPEG support or other common 'display' options as the file is regarded as data, not an image - its a subtle difference but explains the mindset.

    When I published stuff on the web I'd run our raw large images through Photoshop to get pleasing images but compact file sizes.

    It may not have occured for them to do this, and anyway they may regard this as publishing data for other interested parties to download and process themselves.

    1. Re:GIFs quite common in sat imaging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Astronomers in general tend to use FITS files, though.

  42. Funny Swedes! by sdprenzl · · Score: 1, Funny

    The first picture is of the whole sun. The line reads, shot through the "finder telescope." I know of some Norwegians who would remark that only the Swedes would need a finder telescope to find the sun. (LOL)

    --
    --- WWSD? What Would Strider Do?
    1. Re:Funny Swedes! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's currently 11:58pm, and I can't see the sun anywhere!
      Please do advise, my dear (pro-?)norwegian fellow.

  43. childhood pictures by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 2, Funny

    Reminds me of paintings I did as a kid."

    You painted pictures of 404 errors as a kid? Wow. We slashdotted the sun.

    1. Re:childhood pictures by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHAHAHAHahahaHAhahAhAha

      Redundant.

    2. Re:childhood pictures by stinky+wizzleteats · · Score: 1

      Agreed, but when you're making a joke, you have to throw the mods a bone. Woe be unto whosever maketh a joke the moderators don't geteth.

  44. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  45. Re:Also on MSNBC -- ignore it and it will go away by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    No need to feed Uncle Bill's entry into a media monopoly. He already owns 15% of Newsweek and gets to write what he wants for the NYT. Do you really want one person or conglomerate to control all your information?

    Reuters, AP, UPI, BBC and many others professional news sources are much faster. Science, Nature, Scientific American, and New Scientist cover lots of science issues.

  46. Slashdotted by Cinnibar+CP · · Score: 3, Funny

    Apparently, staring at the sun isn't healthy for your eyes OR webservers.

  47. Damn by YAN3D · · Score: 0

    Slashdotted.....Guess I'll just go outside and have a look the old fashioned way. Who needs rods and cones anyway?

  48. Don't you trust the pictures? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Main Entry: incredible
    Pronunciation: (")in-'kre-d&-b&l
    Function: adjective
    Etymology: Middle English, from Latin incredibilis, from in- + credibilis credible
    Date: 15th century
    : too extraordinary and improbable to be believed; also : hard to believe

  49. It's amazing how by rdhill316 · · Score: 3, Funny

    the People at Sun get any work done with all that fire and the burning and fusion all going on around them. It's nice that scientists can take pictures of the inside of a leading computer industry company for study, so the rest of the world can see how hard it is to work in the information sector.

    What?

    Why are you all looking at me like that?

    --

    --
    Me: http://www.robertdhill.com/
  50. Re:Also on MSNBC One Question from article. by Havokmon · · Score: 2, Informative
    The article has a blurb next to the picture:
    The highest resolution solar image ever shows part of the largest sunspot in Active Region 10030. The central region is dark because the strong magnetic fields there stop upwelling hot gas from the solar interior.

    Ok, so that's SUPPOSED to explain why it's dark.. by I thought fire gave off light. While I can see a strong magnetic field blocking gas, shouldn't the surrounding gas give off enough light to see in the hole itself?

    Or is the hole just THAT BIG? (But light from the sun gets to us, you'd think it could light a hole from all sides..)

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  51. Great!!! by BillBat · · Score: 0

    Ths sun has been slashdoted! Now what do we do?

  52. Large images + Slashdot link = uh-oh! by caluml · · Score: 1

    Linking on Slashdot to articles with images 4Mb in size?! Heaven help them... ;)

  53. Mom always told you to not look into the Sun.. by sielwolf · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Hmmm, neat let me open up these images here..." *Click* "Ahhh! My Eyes!!!!!!"

    --
    What is music when you despise all sound?
    1. Re:Mom always told you to not look into the Sun.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Momma always told me not to look into the eyes of the sun,
      But momma, that's where the fun is!

      argh, silly me, kids on Slashdot aren't gonna get that reference.

  54. Re:Also on MSNBC One Question from article. by drudd · · Score: 4, Informative

    Yes, it's that big. Many sunspots are twice the diameter of the earth.

    The real reason they are "dark" is that they are cooler than the gas aronud them. Not that they are cold of course. From one of my astro textbooks:

    Temperature of sunspot: 3900K
    Temperature of surrounding photosphere: 5780K

    Resulting in approximately 1/5 the flux (bolometric flux goes as T^4).

    Doug

    --
    Venn ist das nurnstuck git und Slotermeyer? Ya! Beigerhund das oder die Flipperwaldt gersput!
  55. daystar by strmcrw · · Score: 1

    oh, come on - we all know that this one is a fake
    the daystar is only myth

  56. I'd like to see the pics.. by xchino · · Score: 1

    byt my mom told me never to look directly at the sun. Guess I'll just have to run by the pool with scissors instead.

    --
    Everyone is entitled to their own opinion. It's just that yours is stupid.
  57. Re:Also on MSNBC One Question from article. by Havokmon · · Score: 2
    The real reason they are "dark" is that they are cooler than the gas aronud them.

    Ahh so there's just isn't a 'void' there as "stop upwelling hot gas from the solar interior", would seem to suggest. I guess 'cold' gas is upwelling from the interior :).

    That's what I was wondering. Thanks!

    --
    "I can't give you a brain, so I'll give you a diploma" - The Great Oz (blatently stolen sig)
  58. Uh oh.. I stared by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Um.. I stared at the picture. Am I going to go blind now?

  59. Warning: Potentially Off-Topic Mirroring Comment by ReadParse · · Score: 2
    I keep thinking about this, every time some poor site is slammed. This time I'll bring it up publicly and allow it to be exposed as the ridiculous idea that I'm sure it really is.

    The Slashdot Effect is well known, and it seems like only the strongest sites are able to handle it. One of those sites, clearly, is Slashdot itself. Seems like there could be some mirroring done on Slashdot before a story is posted. Of course, the obvious problem with this idea is that Slashdot has never been about actual hosted content (other than the comments, which are arguably the best part about the site), but rather links to content on other servers. But it has become pretty much standard procedure to link to a site with extra cool content every two to three days only to find that the site is completely unable to hang (or all-too-able to "hang", if you know what I mean). Mirrors often pop up on their own, which is great, but I always wonder why Slashdot doesn't just mirror the extra cool content anyway (I would imagine we can all guess what kind of content qualifies for pre-mirroring... super-cool pictures of the Sun, for example).

    The other issue is one of advance notice, which has already been mentioned in this story's comments. I realize that some information is timely and advance notice is not always possible, but the sun's not going anywhere and there could be advanced notification workflow built into the story approval process (ugh, I said "workflow" and "process" in the same sentence). I would suggest that a "site contact" e-mail address or maybe even a phone number be included with story submissions. The "author" (I've never understood why they're called authors when generally they are administrators or approvers only) could then determine in their best judgement whether they think the site is likely to withstand a good slashdotting and, if not, they can have an e-mail message sent to the contact address, which will advise them of the impending slashdotting and give them some options:
    1. Can't handle it or don't want it... don't link to my site (yes, I believe that anybody should have the right to link to anybody, unless there's good reason to believe that linking in this way will seriously affect the operating of the target site)
    2. We would love the publicity but can't handle the load... please mirror and feel free to advertise on the mirrored pages, even replacing any advertisements that we have on our site.
    3. We're either seriously prepared for this or we want to see what happens to our servers just for fun... fire away
    This decision would be made by clicking on a link or filling out a form on the Slashdot site, which would clear that story for submission to the world, once any pre-mirroring takes place.

    I realize this complicates the process, but Slashdot is no doubt aware of it's impact on sites that it links to, and an otherwise good site that gets killed by a terribly unusual load could be made to look like it's run by incompetents, even if it's in perfectly good hands. I wonder how many sites were actually negatively affected by the Slashdot effect, in either the short or the long term.

    So that's my two cents.
  60. grrrrrrrr..... by frodo+from+middle+ea · · Score: 1

    may all you slashdotters burn in eternal hell... the site is already /.ed. mirrors anyone ?

    --
    for the last time people, I am "frodo from middle eaRTH", not "middle eaST".
  61. The Best Sun Picture Ever... by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

    was the one where there was an eclipse and the sun ended up looking like the Apple Computer logo. For the love of God, will someone please find a link to that image?

  62. Hmm by ShooterNeo · · Score: 2

    Its rather interesting to contrast what the Swedes are doing with advanced optics versus what we Americans are. The Swedes are taking pictures of the sun : we're developing a weapon that can destroy airborne targets with high energy beams of death.

  63. do it yourself by bcrowell · · Score: 4, Informative
    Sunspot observing is really easy. It's nice because you don't need a big telescope, and you can do it even from the light-polluted city. First stop your aperture down to a couple of inches if you have a bigger scope. (You can cut a hole in a piece of paper and put it over the mouth of the tube.) Then put a sock over your finderscope to avoid burning holes in your toes. Put an eyepiece in, but don't look through it! Point the scope at the sun. Don't use the finder (duh!) --- just watch the tube's shadow on the ground and make it as small as possible. Hold a piece of paper near the eyepiece, and adjust the focus either with the focus knob or by moving the paper in and out, or both. The sun's image is projected onto the paper.

    I actually do this sometimes for a whole class of students, and for that I need a big, bright image they can all see, so I use the full aperture of my 8-inch scope. You just have to be careful to limit how long you have it pointed at the sun, because the heat can destroy your eyepiece (melts the glue).

  64. My favorite planet is the Sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Always has been, it's like the king of planets...

    and if you know the reference you're a Will Ferral fan:) hint: 'would you eat the moon if it were made of ribs':)

  65. Images from The Sun? by Linux_ho · · Score: 2

    Heck, I see those in the grocery check-out every week. The Bat-boy, Osama playing cards with Satan, images of Jesus on a taco shell, the 3000-pound transvestite. No need for a telescope, they're available in corner markets everywhere.

    --
    include $sig;
    1;
  66. MOD THIS SUCKA UP!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh yeah!

  67. do the mods actually read these posts ? by a7244270 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    jeez. do the mods actually read these posts ?


    MtViewGuy says : While this new system works great for the visible spectrum of the Sun's output, you still want a space-based observatory to monitor the Sun's output in the other parts of the electromagnetic spectrum You will note that he ignores the critical first 3 words in that Nasa sentence.


    teridon says "no, on the contrary, thats not true", and provides this quote from nasa.gov to support his refutation. "At optical wavelengths, these images are sharper than even current space-based solar observatories can produce."


    and gets modded up to 5 ?


    Hello.... READ. teridon basically confirmed what the other dude said - it works great, but only for for VISIBLE spectrum.


    optical != electomagnetic.


    /me shakes his head and mutters...

    1. Re:do the mods actually read these posts ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah. Now what are you gonna do about it?

      *brandishes muscly flexed arm with anchor tattoo on it*

    2. Re:do the mods actually read these posts ? by teridon · · Score: 2
      Hello.. perhaps it wasn't clear from my post, but I was responding to this post, which said " Still not as good as space based [...]".

      Lighten up "dude".

      --
      I hold it, that a little rebellion, now and then, is a good thing. -- Thomas Jefferson
    3. Re:do the mods actually read these posts ? by a7244270 · · Score: 1

      RAAAAAAAAAARRRRR

    4. Re:do the mods actually read these posts ? by a7244270 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      soz. I'm agravvated by a recent trend, and I guess I took it out on you. Dude.

      Last week someone posted an incorrect formula for Bayesian filtering and got modded up to 5, and before that someone posted a completely bogus discussion of processor pipelining which also got modded up to 5.

      Seems like all you have to do is provide the illusion of information to get modded up.

    5. Re:do the mods actually read these posts ? by Jedi+Binglebop · · Score: 1

      Mod rage?

      -JB

      --

      "I love deadlines. I love the "whooshing" sound they make as they pass by." - Douglas Adams.

    6. Re:do the mods actually read these posts ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Therefore I suggest a new moderation type of "-5, plain wrong"

  68. I suspect that... by DopeRider · · Score: 1

    I suspect that "La Palma" is the name of a spanish island in the Canarias archipelago. BTW, *if* this is the case, it would have been nice to mention the country that hosts these telescope.

  69. oh boy and the sun by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Still looks like a giant flat disk from my questar mylar 100000 filter.

    (minus some color differences)

  70. Mirror (of sorts) by andrewdm · · Score: 1

    This was today's Astronmy Picture of the Day over at NASA.

    Along with one picture, they have the following commentary (go to the link above if you want to follow the many informative embedded links they have):

    Explanation: This stunning image shows remarkable and mysterious details near the dark central region of a planet-sized sunspot in one of the sharpest views ever of the surface of the Sun. Just released, the picture was made using the Swedish Solar Telescope now in its first year of operation on the Canary Island of La Palma. Along with features described as hairs and canals are dark cores visible within the bright filaments that extend into the sunspot, representing previously unknown and unexplored solar phenomena. The filaments' newly revealed dark cores are seen to be thousands of kilometers long but only about 100 kilometers wide. Resolving features 100 kilometers wide or less is a milestone in solar astronomy and has been achieved here using sophisticated adaptive optics, digital image stacking, and processing techniques to counter the blurring effect of Earth's atmosphere. At optical wavelengths, these images are sharper than even current space-based solar observatories can produce. Recorded on 15 July 2002, the sunspot shown is the largest of the group of sunspots cataloged as solar active region AR 10030.

  71. OH NO!!!! by LoudMusic · · Score: 5, Funny

    The Sun is on FIRE!!!! We're doooooooooooommmmeeddd!!!!!

    If only we had known this before, maybe we could have done something about it!

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
  72. Is there a better song written about our Sun? by defile · · Score: 2

    Why Does The Sun Shine,
    by They Might Be Giants

    The sun is a mass of incandescent gas
    A gigantic nuclear furnace
    Where hydrogen is built into helium
    At a temperature of millions of degrees

    Yo ho, it's hot, the sun is not
    A place where we could live
    But here on Earth there'd be no life
    Without the light it gives

    We need its light
    We need its heat
    We need its energy
    Without the sun, without a doubt
    There'd be no you and me

    The sun is a mass of incandescent gas
    A gigantic nuclear furnace
    Where hydrogen is built into helium
    At a temperature of millions of degrees

    The sun is hot

    It is so hot that everything on it is a gas: iron, copper, aluminum, and many others.

    The sun is large

    If the sun were hollow, a million Earths could fit inside. And yet, the sun is only a middle-sized star.

    The sun is far away

    About 93 million miles away, and that's why it looks so small.

    And even when it's out of sight
    The sun shines night and day

    The sun gives heat
    The sun gives light
    The sunlight that we see
    The sunlight comes from our own sun's
    Atomic energy

    Scientists have found that the sun is a huge atom-smashing machine. The heat and light of the sun come from the nuclear reactions of hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, and helium.

    The sun is a mass of incandescent gas
    A gigantic nuclear furnace
    Where hydrogen is built into helium
    At a temperature of millions of degrees

  73. The Sun? What's that? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who says slashdotters never see the sun?

  74. I found it! by Tablizer · · Score: 2

    The resolution is so good that I think I can make out the ON/OFF switch in one.

  75. Latency by Shamanin · · Score: 2

    After clicking on an image at the site and waiting for a good couple of minutes, I realized that my request for images of the sun must be realtime and my lag was the transmission time from the sun back to the earth (isn't that a couple of hours?). Stop with the cruel physics jokes guys, my patience is wearing thin...

    --
    come on fhqwhgads
    1. Re:Latency by CYberPhreak · · Score: 1

      *stretches back to high school astronomy and private studies*

      Uh... no... earth is about 8 light minutes away from the sun, so there would only be an 8 minute lag.

      --

      Buy the ticket, take the ride.

  76. Re:Warning: Potentially Off-Topic Mirroring Commen by jlbennett2 · · Score: 1

    How about suggesting that folks use Google caches when available?

    --
    Randomly clicking into the moebiac abyss...
  77. no one has pointed out it seems by MadBurner · · Score: 1

    These pictures are finominal. not neccessarily the technology but just the beauty of the images. What incredible raw power. it's not often a picture can convey such large amounts of energy like this. raises my adrenaline just looking at them. Bring on more images!

  78. Canal by loconet · · Score: 2

    So now that they see canals on the Sun, do they think theres water there too?

    --
    [alk]
  79. Sometimes the oldest jokes... by Mulletproof · · Score: 3, Funny

    Imagine a beowold cluster of-- No, wait... That'd be a black hole. Nevermind.

    --
    You need a FREE iPod Nano
  80. Don't Look Directly At It! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Damn, too late, where's that dog and cane...

  81. Just to put things in perspective by H0ek · · Score: 1
    If you can manage to get the close-up of the sunspots, concider the big one roughly in the middle. If the tickmarks are correct, it is roughly 12,000 x 16,000 km.

    The diameter of the earth is pretty darn close to that.

    Moral to the story: sunspots are really big.

    No, I mean it.

    Big.

    --
    H0ek
    Think you're smart? Prove you've got brains!
  82. Pictures in the flames by Thornae · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you scroll ... you can see a nearly perfect image of a face.

    It's a phenomenon known as pareidolia , and is quite a fascinating subject in its own right. Briefly, the human mind tends to seek patterns that it recognizes. When faced with a chaotic input, the mind creates patterns where none exist. Carl Sagan argues that faces in particular are hardwired into our recognition centres.

    Incidentally, I can't see the face you're talking about there. (I'm probably not tired enough, as I find I'm very prone to seeing faces everywhere after an all-nighter.)
    I did find a yin/yang symbol, though...

    --
    |>
    Here be Dragons
    1. Re:Pictures in the flames by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think I found the face. I outlined it for ya.

      Original image.

    2. Re:Pictures in the flames by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Carl Sagan argues that faces in particular are hardwired into our recognition centres.

      How do you explain that about half of the population sees tits when faced with chaotic input ?

    3. Re:Pictures in the flames by Thornae · · Score: 1

      Carl Sagan argues that faces in particular are hardwired into our recognition centres.
      How do you explain that about half of the population sees tits when faced with chaotic input?


      Sagan's argument was that facial recognition is evolutionarily advantageous to a newborn baby.
      By that reasoning, tits are just as valid... (=

      --
      |>
      Here be Dragons
    4. Re:Pictures in the flames by Thornae · · Score: 1

      Oh, okay. Got it - thanks. Although it's a pretty cartoony sort of face.. (=
      Faces are pretty easy to infer into things, though, really. All you need is three dots in a reasonably triangular configuration, with one dot larger than the other two. eg :o
      Incidentally, by my reckoning, that face is several thousand kms high....

      --
      |>
      Here be Dragons
  83. 'Dark' Current explanation by CharlieO · · Score: 2, Informative

    No - Dark Current is very very well understood!

    Any matter will radiate energy according to its temperature - you've heard of this as Black Body Radiation.

    Now in remote sensing you are often working in the IR region, because
    a) this is where the 'windows' in the atmospheres absorption curve are
    b) comparision of two bands give us intresting information - eg NVDI tells us the approximate vegitation cover from a simple comparisson of 2 channels.

    In this case the detector must be cooler then the thing it is observing, otherwise your detector will respond to radiation emitted by itself and the equipment around it.

    In the case of astronomical CCDs a similar effect is at work. CCDs work by creating small pockets in silicon that work very much like capacitors. The energy of photons (light particles) striking the material causes charge to build up in these pockets.

    When enough charge has built up you can then 'read' the charge level in a similar way you can read memory (though clearly with more than a binary state) and infer the brightness of each pixel from the charge level.

    This is fine for Video/Digital Photography use as a short exposure gets plenty of photons and you have an image.

    In astronomy however you take exposure on a timescale of hours, sometimes your image maybe formed from a handful of photons. The problem here is that thermal processes in the CCD material itself can also deposit charge in the pockets by causing small stray currents and from phonon interaction in the silicon lattice itself.

    If you cool the CCD in a dewar of liquid nitrogen, you limit these thermal issues, and have long exposures. The cost comes from building electronics that can survive the thermal shock of going from 25 Centigrade to -197 Centigrade in 10 minutes or so, and also having very very high quality CCDs to start with.

    Been there, done that to extend the life of the 16inch telescope at my old Uni.

    BTW - its not just an astronomy issue, consumers are starting to see it in digital cameras, especially SLR replacements. Take a look at a long exposure and you will see speccles - this is in part due to dark current, and in part due to increasing the gain of the CCD to try and limit the exposure length and therefore dark current issues - a tricky balance to get right, and some are better than others.

  84. La Palma... by Emperor+BMA · · Score: 1

    Isn't the volcano on La Palma supposed to collapse into the Atlantic Ocean creating a megatsunami that will wipe out most of the Eastern seaboard of the US, as per the megatsunami show on Discovery Channel?

    If it is, I hope that that doesn't happen soon, because that looks like a nice telescope.

    1. Re:La Palma... by mlofdahl · · Score: 1

      There are two peaks on La Palma. This one, Roque de los Muchachos, is an extinct volcano (at least we hoe so!). It's the other one that is supposedly going to make a splash that will make eastern US a really wet place. /Mats

  85. If you look at those images... by skurk · · Score: 1

    Look at this this one for instance.

    Am I the only one spotting mandelbrots here?

    -skurk

    --
    www.6502asm.com - Code 6502 assembly or.. DIE!!
  86. I *knew* that was how it worked! by jbayes · · Score: 1

    Hey, check it out, you can see the fire elementals!

    --

    "It sure was strange to see something on Usenet about me that didn't involve Klingon gang rape." -- Wil Wheaton

  87. Re:Also on MSNBC One Question from article. by Jhan · · Score: 2

    Not quite, but almost. :-)

    The magnetic fields are forcing upwelling gas away from the spot (hot as well as cold). However, the effect can only be so strong. Even the magnetic fields of the sun can't cause a complete vacuum in the sunspot. Gass will diffuse in from every direction.

    The end result is that the region simply has a somewhat lower density than surrounding regions. Lower density==lower temperature==(much) lower luminosity.

    --

    I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.

  88. Astronomy picture of the day by dsfd · · Score: 1

    One of the pictures is today's "Astronomy Picture of the Day":

    http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap021114.html

    For another surprinsing view of the sun, but very different, take a look (in the same site) at:

    http://antwrp.gsfc.nasa.gov/apod/ap021110.html

    I

  89. No, the Way of the Gourd! by Tumbleweed · · Score: 2

    It's Elvis, you dumbass!

    Geez.

  90. My website has an incredible image of a star too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My tight, brown star that is. Suck on it slashfags.

  91. Mars Face by nucal · · Score: 2

    Sun face must be related to Martian face.

  92. Hey that looks familiar.... by Caez · · Score: 0

    Oh yeah! It looks like the eggs I ate for breakfast! I think we're being tricked.

    --
    http://www.mistersampo.com
  93. Yup! by WhiteBandit · · Score: 1

    That is exactly it! Well at least we know I'm not imagining things.

  94. interesting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few months back, the smog was so thick in the DC area that I could look directly at the sun without even blinking. In fact, I found that I could look at it with binoculars and pick out sunspots similar to the ones in that closeup. Mind you, I normally wouldn't recommend that anyone try looking directly at the sun with binoculars or the naked eye.

  95. yikes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks sort of like Solaris. Or one big fuckin' ocean of fire.

  96. DO NOT LINK TO THIS SITE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    they use GIF do not click on this site do not visit do not support them!!!! they are dumb faggotes who use closed source softwear!!!! only a nigger would use GIF!!!!!!!!!!!

  97. Warning! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do not look directly at these images!

  98. Link to not-slashdotted image by EnlightenmentFan · · Score: 2
    The link teridon posted is actually NASA's "Astronomy picture of the day" for November 14. It's a closeup of the Sun, the best of those Swedish pictures featured in the story. You can also look over NASA's archive of such pix here. Incredible variety: for example "Leonids over Ayer's Rock", "Gullies on Mars", "Jupiter, Moon, and Bees."

    Anyway, NASA puts up a new image every day, which you can check out by bookmarking this URL.

    --
    Making trouble today for a better tomorrow...
  99. Goatse.cx-guy, is that you?? by 10Ghz · · Score: 2

    http://www.solarphysics.kva.se/NatureNov2002/image s/AR10030_4877_color.jpeg

    --
    Lesbian Nazi Hookers Abducted by UFOs and Forced Into Weight Loss Programs - -all next week on Town Talk.
  100. Something for the National Enquirer... by Random+Addict · · Score: 1
    Heh! Looking at the (unslashdotted) JPEG, I noticed off to the right side of my screen there seems to be a somewhat lopsided image of a goat's head, or perhaps a bull's head...and scrolling down a bit, on the left side of the screen there is an image of a man's face with Mephistophelean mustache and goatee. Perhaps this will show up in the National Enquirer under a caption like, "Scientists photograph images from Hell for first time!"

    --
    __
    The optimist proclaims we live in the best of all possible worlds. The pessimist fears this may be true.
  101. Re:copies of the article by mazur · · Score: 1
    [shacknet.nu]
    see this too space.com

    You, sir, are a Prince among men. Thank you.

    Stefan.

    --
    The truth shall make you fret. (Ankh-Morpork tImes motto)