The most detailed survey of the universe ever conducted starts now

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The most detailed survey of the universe ever conducted starts now

A field of stars in the constellation Lupus captured by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory

NSF–DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory/NOIRLab/SLAC​/AURA

The Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile is finally beginning its mammoth survey of the universe. After a year of testing and calibration, it is starting the Legacy Survey of Space and Time, which is poised to become the most detailed record of the universe ever captured.

“Today, we begin filming the greatest cosmic movie ever made,” said Brian Stone at the US National Science Foundation in a statement.

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For the next decade, Rubin will collect about 10 terabytes of data every night in the form of hundreds of high-resolution images of the southern sky. Each image will cover an area about 40 times the size of the full moon, and the completed survey will include nearly the entirety of the sky that is visible from the southern hemisphere.

This treasure trove of data will serve several purposes. The first, which has already begun, is to alert researchers to anything changing in the night sky, such as the appearance of supernovae or the motion of asteroids and comets.

“Millions of alerts in just the last couple of months show that Rubin is up and running as a discovery machine,” said Phil Marshall at Stanford University in California, who is part of the Rubin team. “Now we’re putting it all together.”

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These alerts have already led to the discovery of more than 11,000 new asteroids, and they are expected to result in the most complete inventory of solar system objects ever created.

In addition to canvassing the solar system, Rubin will provide information about more distant objects, building a detailed map of the Milky Way galaxy and peering deeper into the universe.

An early-release image (above) shows a sea of stars, interstellar gas and even distant galaxies. Such deep, detailed images taken again and again over 10 years will enable researchers to study rare cosmic events and even gain insight into dark matter, dark energy and the expansion of the universe.

Little Red Dots: A cosmic mystery

When the James Webb Space Telescope turned its mirrors to the early universe, it found stretches of space filled with little red dots. In this talk, astrophysicist Chris Lintott brings the latest news from this cosmic frontier to explain what these Little Red Dots are really telling us.

Topics:

  • astronomy/
  • solar system
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