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Home > News > Tags > Telescope
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Soon, the first set of “ears” for the Atacama Large Millimeter Array (ALMA) telescope, which is currently under construction in Chile, will be shipped out from England. The UK is in charge of delivering the first receivers for the international project, which will create a telescope that totals the observ... |
25 March 2009 06:02 GMT |
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The Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search (MINOS) telescope detector, buried some 700 meters (2,200 feet) below the surface of Soudan, Minnesota, offered its operators a surprise recently, when it proved that it could interpret decays from the stratosphere (which is the upper layer of the atmosphere) and superimp... |
22 January 2009 12:09 GMT |
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Surprisingly, the skies over the southern hemisphere of the Earth have never been scoured in great detail, such as the Sloan Digital Sky Survey has done for the northern regions. As such, the knowledge scale is heavily tilted towards the celestial objects of the north. This issue had to be addressed, especially since... |
16 December 2008 06:43 GMT |
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A massive project involving the building process of the world's greatest neutrino telescope is currently under development far to the southern pole, in Antarctica. A bold group of experts from the University of Delaware are facing the blistering cold deep underneath the snowy surface in an attempt to have the de... |
10 December 2008 17:21 GMT |
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After having constantly delayed the scheduled date of the servicing mission that's supposed to repair the Hubble Space Telescope, NASA officials have finally come up with a target date. If all goes well – although we have heard this before – the shuttle carrying the repairing crew will launch next ye... |
5 December 2008 09:12 GMT |
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Astronomy has gone a long way since the telescope was invented, and this device allows today's scientists to detect and deduce the presence of large planets outside our solar system. Still, the limited technology we have restrains the possibilities of finding smaller, Earth-like planets which may actually be mor... |
4 December 2008 10:45 GMT |
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Technology is steadily evolving, devices and gadgets become increasingly smaller and optical resolution gets ever larger. Regular photo cameras now boast impressive 5 megapixel resolution and fantastic zoom-in abilities. Well, impressive until some while ago, that is. Still, in this accelerating age of minimizing si... |
1 December 2008 10:01 GMT |
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A new press release from the European Organization for Astronomical Research in the Southern Hemisphere (ESO, an inter-governmental institution involving 13 member states) shows the importance of the submillimeter astronomy field. Focusing on the formation of new stars within a studied region of space, it demonstrate... |
12 November 2008 10:27 GMT |
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When thinking of the vastness of space, on how little we know and have seen of it and on how much there is still left to discover and prove, choosing the next missions that will be set in motion in a decade or so seems to be the most difficult thing to do. So, what will it be - dark matter, Earth-like planets, u... |
12 November 2008 03:50 GMT |
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Chinese researchers' long dream of building a facility better but still relying on the technology used on a national scale for astronomical search purposes has finally come true. Housed in a building that looks like a nuclear missile silo and a messed up PI symbol lies their latest achievement, the Large sky Are... |
7 November 2008 08:29 GMT |
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At last, after more than a month of constant glitches and failed resurrection attempts, the 18-year old Hubble Space Telescope has once more opened one of its eyes towards the sky. The device seems to have recovered well after the mishaps sent it to an idle safe mode state and has currently resumed its space photogra... |
30 October 2008 11:11 GMT |
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The most famous and oldest machine that ever put us in contact with the universe malfunctioned a little more than a month ago. Ever since, the technicians at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Maryland have been trying to rehabilitate the device's “brain”, namely switching to an alternative o... |
27 October 2008 06:11 GMT |
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The latest efforts of the specialists at NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center in Greenbelt, Maryland, have so far proved successful. They eventually managed to resurrect the Hubble Space Telescope's Side B computers, and are currently observing their behavior until the end of the week. If all goes well and n... |
25 October 2008 05:24 GMT |
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Some 3 weeks ago, Hubble suffered a major glitch that prevented it from capturing and sending back the amazing pictures that we were accustomed to. NASA planned to repair it this week and have it online by Friday, but the failure to reboot on Thursday is still keeping the telescope silent and only able to use a minor... |
18 October 2008 04:10 GMT |
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Today, the attempts of repairing the glitch that has silenced the Hubble Space Telescope about 2 weeks ago have started. The ground technicians aim to revitalize some alternative computer components that have lied in a dormant state for over 18 years, since the $2 billion telescope was launched into space. A vas... |
15 October 2008 08:58 GMT |
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The smallest of the Kuiper Belt Objects remain elusive for all the searches attempted over the past few years. Finding some would help explain a number of theories related to the solar system's formation and evolution. Since the icy ring of frozen bodies known as the Kuiper Belt was discovered beyond Neptun... |
4 October 2008 07:29 GMT |
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Although some scientists celebrate 400 years since the telescope was first invented, today, others prefer to wait until 2009, the officially declared International Year of Astronomy. This further proves the controversy on the exact date of the creation of the device.According to some experts, the first real telescope... |
2 October 2008 10:33 GMT |
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A few days ago, NASA officials announced that the recent mishap that affected the Hubble Space Telescope on Saturday, September 27th, prevented the servicing mission scheduled for October 14th from taking place. Instead, the mission is currently moved to next year, until the problem is dealt with.The Hubble trouble l... |
1 October 2008 09:34 GMT |
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The happy owners of HTC's Touch Diamond Pocket PC might get even happier after finding out that their precious handset can be improved when it comes to photography related performances. This is not done by a ROM update or anything like that, but thanks to a new telescope especially created for the Touch Diamond.... |
27 August 2008 22:46 GMT |
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While the iPhone is a superb piece of work, some features, such as the phone's camera, are pretty poor for the standards the device imposes, as a smartphone. However, if you are starting to regret having gone with the iPhone because the camera is poor, think different... a lot more different.The guys at Mobile.B... |
19 August 2008 05:05 GMT |
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Most of the light provided by the light source posted behind liquid crystal display panels never even reaches the eyes of the viewer. Light must pass through individual pixels whose brightness levels are controlled by small liquid crystals that modify their transparency according to the electric signal input. Therefo... |
23 July 2008 04:43 GMT |
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Traditional glass mirrors used in telescope manufacturing are very expensive and extremely hard to build, not to mention that they weigh a 'ton' and are incredibly difficult to maneuver. And then there's always the risk that once completed, they may not turn out to be perfect for the job (remember Hubb... |
2 June 2008 06:31 GMT |
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The Hubble Space Telescope, currently operated by the NASA/ESA collaboration, celebrates 18 years since it was launched into space. In order to mark this moment, the Hubble collaboration is now launching the vastest amount of individual images ever released at once for public use - 59 new images - presenting dramatic... |
24 April 2008 10:42 GMT |
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The most powerful ground based telescope in the world, the Large Binocular Telescope located on Mount Graham, equipped with two 8.4 meter mirrors and the only operational telescope functioning in binocular light, has recently released its first three images featuring a galaxy more than 102 million light years away fr... |
6 March 2008 04:36 GMT |
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I'm sure many mobile users that own a camera phone would often want their devices to pack a more evolved camera. Even if we now have phones with 5 Megapixels and 3x optical zoom that manage to offer very good photos, their quality cannot be compared yet with that obtained with professional cameras.To solve this ... |
19 February 2008 05:17 GMT |
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Researchers have always wanted better and bigger tools to explore the immensity of the universe. Bigger telescopes, for example, can be used to obtain higher resolution pictures of extremely remote galaxies and stars, to observe and better understand how the early universe was like. And despite the levels of federal ... |
15 November 2007 07:43 GMT |
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During a landmark test, the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR), together with a team of research partners have successfully launched a solar telescope to an altitude of ...120,000 feet, meaning almost 40.000 meters. The craziest part is for that they used a balloon larger than a Boeing 747 jumbo jet. Giv... |
24 October 2007 03:39 GMT |
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A great obstacle has been overcome: for the first time, astronomers from the California Institute of Technology and the University of Cambridge have obtained detailed space pictures from Earth, using a new camera that delivers more accurate images of stars and nebulae than even the Hubble Space Telescope.Pictures tak... |
5 September 2007 04:11 GMT |
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These new tiny telescopes will not help people to see to the stars, but at least will save them from blindness. This could be so when it comes to advanced macular degeneration, the main factor of age-related blindness and starting its development usually after 55 years. The new optical prosthetics significantly impro... |
17 August 2007 04:36 GMT |
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August will be a good month for skywatchers around the world, as the most important meteor shower of the year will put an impressive show, with dozens of shooting stars being expected each hour in the night sky.The best thing about the annual Perseid meteor shower is the fact that the Moon - space bane of meteor watc... |
13 July 2007 02:46 GMT |
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Space telescopes observing the Sun have provided invaluable information on various aspects of our governing star, like its atmospheric composition and events, chemical and physical structure, evolution and ultimate fate, but they are facing a difficult problem.They literally go blind in time from looking at the Sun ... |
11 July 2007 09:41 GMT |
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The world's largest telescope will make its first observations this week, in a "first light" ceremony, after 17 years of construction. Although not fully completed, it will be able to take its first look at the sky on July 13, so its makers are not at all superstitious.Gran Telescopio Canarias, or GTC, sometime... |
10 July 2007 11:06 GMT |
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The golden age of discovery astronomy is entering now could lead to major breakthroughs and answers to fundamental cosmology questions, like the origin of the galaxies, probably the most important of all. New telescopes and instruments, soon to be deployed could observe distant events early in the life of the univer... |
5 July 2007 05:48 GMT |
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Lenses are used to converge or diverge light in various optical and electronic devices and the first written records of the use of a lens date to Ancient Greece, in 424 BC. The optical zoom lenses in professional television cameras can have a magnification ratio as high as 100x.There are some things that a single mi... |
4 July 2007 09:48 GMT |
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Yesterday, the space shuttle Endeavour rolled out of the hangar and was taken to the vehicle assembly building at Kennedy Space Center in Florida, where a fuel tank and the booster rockets were mounted on it, in preparation for the next mission, scheduled on August 7.Endeavour, one of the original five spaceships i... |
3 July 2007 02:50 GMT |
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A new computer program makes it easier to identify the stars on a particular piece of the sky, thus helping astronomers do their job in less time and with higher accuracy. It works for all kinds of pictures, from those taken by large telescopes to those captured by amateur astronomers.The computer program has been d... |
28 June 2007 03:31 GMT |
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Ares V is the new Cargo Launch Vehicle under development at NASA, part of the Project Constellation, aimed to out people on the Moon, again and on Mars, for the first time. Though the rocket is still on the drawing board, scientists are thrilled about what it could carry into space."The Ares V rocket will be able to... |
27 June 2007 05:52 GMT |
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The Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope, or GLAST is the next telescope built by NASA, designed to explore astrophysical and cosmological phenomena such as active galactic nuclei, pulsars, other high-energy sources, and dark matter.It will be launched on December 14, 2007, but until then, it's been subjected t... |
26 June 2007 11:10 GMT |
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NASA is becoming more and more interested in future scientific applications based on the Moon. The agency asked the US National Research Council (NRC) in 2006 to advise it on what kinds of science could be tackled from the Moon and what projects should be given top priority.They liked the idea of an American astrono... |
25 June 2007 11:18 GMT |
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Lenses are used to converge or diverge light in various optical and electronic devices and the first written records of the use of a lens date to Ancient Greece, in 424 BC. The optical zoom lenses in professional television cameras can have a magnification ratio as high as 100x.A group of scientists claim to have cr... |
21 June 2007 05:01 GMT |
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The Hubble Space Telescope has recently sent some very impressive pictures of two of the largest known asteroids, showing the craters and other spectacular features on the two cosmic boulders, that will soon be explored in detail by NASA's Dawn spacecraft.Hubble is a telescope in orbit around the Earth, named a... |
21 June 2007 04:21 GMT |
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Finding planets orbiting stars at great distances from our solar system is not an easy job, but there seems to be many of them out there, according to recent observations. And that's a great thing, since it's actually harder than finding a needle in a hay stack. It's more like looking for a firefly fly... |
20 June 2007 11:07 GMT |
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No telescope can form a perfect image. Even if a reflecting telescope could have a perfect mirror, or a refracting telescope could have a perfect lens, the effects of aperture diffraction could still not be escaped.The blurring effect from the atmosphere is among the most important distortions that affect telescopes... |
19 June 2007 15:26 GMT |
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NASA has just released a spectacular photo of thousands of galaxies gathered in a sort of family album. This picture is a symbol of the technology being used by astronomers worldwide to capture a glimpse of the vast universe that surrounds us, and of the progress mankind has made in the last centuries. There are pro... |
19 June 2007 08:22 GMT |
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Space…the final frontier! For all the natural-born astronomers out there who suffer from insomnia, Meade introduces a revolutionary way to explore the universe: the mySKY "astronomy professor". The device is an easy-to-use multi-media player designed to guide you through the night sky like no other.Meade's paten... |
6 June 2007 03:49 GMT |
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NASA's James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) is a planned space infrared observatory, intended to be a significant improvement on the aging Hubble Space Telescope, which is about to be decommissioned, after successfully serving its purpose since 1990. The agency is considering equipping the telescope with a grapple... |
1 June 2007 16:11 GMT |
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Altair is the brightest star in the constellation Aquila and the twelfth brightest star in the nighttime sky, an "A" type or white star located 17 light years away from Earth (about 99 trillion miles), one of the closest stars visible to the naked eye.Astronomers have previously photographed some of the red-giants o... |
1 June 2007 05:07 GMT |
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How can astronomers perceive depth in space when determining the distance to certain mysterious bodies in and around our Milky Way galaxy? Well, using only one telescope doesn't really do the job so they use a mathematical solution that looks more like an optical illusion.Astronomers use NASA's Spitzer... |
31 May 2007 10:13 GMT |
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SETI is an acronym for Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence, the collective name for a number of organized efforts to detect Extraterrestrial life. The project aims to survey the sky to detect the existence of transmissions from a civilization on a distant planet.The institute is planning to have 42 radio astro... |
29 May 2007 07:21 GMT |
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A gigantic telescope is about to be built in Antarctica and scientists hope to be able to catch a glimpse of neutrinos, the exotic particles traveling almost at the speed of light for millions of miles through space, passing right through planets.The name of the telescope is "IceCube" because it consists of thousand... |
24 May 2007 03:37 GMT |
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