1.4 Billion Pixel Camera To Watch For Asteroids
SpaceSlug writes "The world's largest digital camera is to be used to keep an eye out for asteroids heading towards Earth. The Panoramic Survey Telescope and Rapid Response System (Pan-STARRS) has been built by researchers at MIT's Lincoln Lab. At its heart is a 1.4 billion pixel (or 1400 megapixel) camera that will scan the night sky looking for rogue near-Earth objects from atop Mount Haleakala in Maui Island, Hawaii. The system uses something called an orthogonal transfer CCD to remove atmospheric blur from images."
You just need to point her down at the beaches of Hawaii a few times a year and capture some of the scenery.
can you say gigapixelboobs.com?
There's nothing Intelligent about Intelligent Design.
So now we will be able to see asteroids that could slam into our planet and possibly end life, but then what? Hit it with a missile or go Armageddon style on it?
"A claim for equality of material position can be met only by a government with totalitarian powers." Hayek
1.41 jiggapixels, panning at 88 arcseconds per hour.
When this baby hits 88 arcseconds per hour, you're going to see some serious shit.
"Quote me as saying I was mis-quoted." -Groucho Marx
Last time I looked, Asteroids was at the local bowling alley. Do I win a prize? Do these youngster space explorer types need any more investigative help? All the comets they need are under my kitchen sink! there! ba da bing! Oh, my neighbor guy has Saturn in his driveway! But if you guys need help or a camera to find Uranus... damn, I'm out!
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Asteroid hunting doesn't really have anything to do with blue or red shifting. You're not looking to see whether a distant object is moving towards or away form you. More likely, they're looking at dots. Specifically, which dots in picture A moved in comparison to picture B and which one didn't.
Think of it this way: Step out at night and look at the stars and whatever planet happens to be in view. Now, step out the next night at precisely the same time (ok, to be fair, a couple minutes later) and look again. The stars are in the same spot, but the planet has moved.
With high-res digital cameras you can take very precise pictures, then let software pick out which of the faint dots are distant stars, and which maybe be asteroids. It's a pretty standard way of discovering and plotting the course of the various odds and ends floating around our solar system.
There are some people that if they don't know, you can't tell 'em.
The system uses something called an orthogonal transfer CCD to remove atmospheric blur from images.
Shoddy. "Something called?" Come on, guys, this is supposed to be "news for nerds". If you can't find it on wikipedia, use google.
orthogonal transfer CCD (OTCCD)
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... the manufacturers only included a 16mb SD card.
You also should read a story published 4 days ago about this camera by ZDNet. Here is a link to this article, which contains several pictures not included in the Technology Review article.
UFOs by definition don't have visible license plates. If it had a license plate it wouldn't be unidentified, now would it?
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Martin? Bro? Is that you? I have a question for you:
why does the internet get slow every time i send you pictures?
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