Astronomy Picture of the Day |
APOD: 1997 December 27 - Keck: The Largest Optical Telescopes
Explanation:
In buildings eight stories tall rest mirrors ten meters across that are
slowly allowing humanity to map the universe. Alone, each is the
world's
largest optical telescope: Keck.
Together, the twin Keck telescopes have the
resolving power of a single telescope 90-meter in diameter, able to discern
sources just milliarcseconds apart. Since
opening in 1992, the real power of Keck I (left) has been in its
enormous light-
gathering ability - allowing
astronomers to
study faint and
distant objects in
our Galaxy and the universe.
Keck II, completed last year, and its twin are located on the dormant volcano
Mauna
Kea,
Hawaii,
USA. In the distance is Maui's volcano Haleakala. One reason Keck was built was because of the
difficulty for astronomers to get funding for a smaller telescope.
APOD: 1999 June 23 - The Sudbury Neutrino Detector
Explanation:
Two thousand meters below the ground, a giant sphere
has begun to detect nearly invisible particles. These particles,
neutrinos, are
extremely abundant in the universe but usually
go right through just about everything.
By stocking
this 12-meter sphere with an unusual type of
heavy water and surrounding it with light detectors,
astrophysicists hope to catch the occasional collision.
Since the Sudbury Neutrino Observatory (SNO) is
sensitive to all types of
neutrinos, future results
might hold clues to how much
neutrinos change types on the fly,
how our own
Sun emits neutrinos, and even how
important neutrinos are to the composition of the
entire universe.
APOD: 1999 June 20 - A Very Large Array of Radio Telescopes
Explanation:
Pictured above is one of the world's premiere radio astronomical
observatories: The
Very
Large Array (VLA). Each antenna dish is as big as a
house
(25 meters across) and mounted on
railroad tracks.
The VLA consists of 27 dishes - together capable of
spanning the size of a city (35 kilometers). The
VLA
is the most sensitive
radio telescope ever, and, through
interferometry, can resolve a golf ball-sized radio source 150
kilometers away (0.04 arcsec).
The
VLA
is continually making new
discoveries, including determining the
composition
of galaxies,
passing
comets, quasars,
HII regions, and
clusters of galaxies.
The VLA is also used to receive the
weak
radio signals broadcast from interplanetary
spacecraft. The VLA is located in
New Mexico, USA. A
significant upgrade of VLA's capabilities is planned.
Authors & editors:
Robert
Nemiroff
(MTU)
& Jerry Bonnell (USRA)
NASA Technical Rep.:
Jay Norris.
Specific rights apply.
A service of:
LHEA at
NASA/
GSFC
&
Michigan Tech. U.