Digitizing 100 Years of Astronomical Data
Maximum Prophet writes to mention that a collection of glass plates containing astronomical information from the late 19th century through the mid-1980s is being considered for digitization. "The accumulated result weighs heavily on its keepers on Observatory Hill, just up Garden Street from Harvard Square: more than half a million images constituting humanity's only record of a century's worth of sky. 'Besides being 25 percent of the world's total of astronomical photographic plates, this is the only collection that covers both hemispheres,' said Alison Doane, curator of a glass database occupying three floors, two of them subterranean, connected by corkscrew stairs. It weighs 165 tons and contains more than a petabyte of data. The scary thing is that there is no backup." I'm sure that anyone with a spare $5 million or so would be welcomed with open arms.
now there is some irony.
I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
This seems like a great opportunity for either corporate sponsorship, or a grass-roots donation drive. In all honesty, $5 million isn't a whole lot of money for the likes of any real corporation, and it probably wouldn't be that hard to raise it through small donations from individuals. Espectially if you could ascribe names to some or all of it. How would it feel to be able to personally identify which plates you paid to have scanned? (this image of the Crab Nebula brought to you by John Smith) I'm surprised Paul Allen or Richard Branson aren't all over this like stink on shit.
I'm sure that a company like google would be MORE than willing to fund a project archiving these. The positive press, proliferation of their intended "do no evil/good guy/just another bunch of geeks" image, having their name on a major scientific project would easily be worth the investment.
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Those plates as well as being old and delicate contain a LOT more information then a piece of paper. Considering that something less then 1/4 the size of the period on the end of the sentence is important your scanning at a much higher resolution.
Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
here is a practically infinite amount of data on each of those plates, limited by our precision in measuring them.
And limited by the lenses/mirrors, and limited by atmospheric effects, and inconsistencies in the glass, and the silver, and, and....
I can't testify to the quality of the glass negatives, but I can testify to the fact that as much as people like to believe, even the best modern analog capture sources aren't anywhere near practically infinite, even in the best laboratory conditions.
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