NationalGeographic.com | June 22, 2010 | If a planet-destroying
asteroid is headed for Earth, scientists now have a much better chance
of spotting it.

>From its perch atop Hawaii’s dormant Haleakala volcano, the PS1
telescope, which boasts the world's largest digital camera, has begun
full-time operations, snapping hundreds of high-resolution photos each
day as it scans the sky for space rocks and strange stellar phenomena.

PS1 is the first of several telescopes planned as part of the Panoramic
Survey Telescope & Rapid Response System, or Pan-STARRS. The telescope
will map near-Earth asteroids ranging in size from 984 feet (300
meters)—big enough to cause major regional destruction if one struck an
inhabited area—to 0.6-mile (1-kilometer), which have the potential to
produce global catastrophe.

“It provides the best early-warning system we have,” said Edo Berger, a
professor with the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics who has
studied data from the telescope. The center is part of a consortium
that is helping to fund PS1.

A Digital Eye Bigger Than Hubble's

Although PS1 first came online in late 2008, it only began complete
dusk-to-dawn operations last month.

Now, every 30 seconds PS1 snaps a 1,400-megapixel shot of a section of
sky as large as 36 full moons—a view 3,600 times larger than the Hubble
Space Telescope’s main camera. One of these images would produce a
300-dpi print covering half a basketball court.

In total the telescope gathers enough data to fill a thousand DVDs
(nearly five terabytes) every night and maps a sixth of the sky each
month. It can also see objects ten times fainter than previous surveys.

These abilities are key to discovering not only killer space rocks but
huge numbers of much more common phenomena, from planet-size bodies in
our solar system to far-flung cosmic cataclysms.

“For example, we have been able to find more explosive astronomical
phenomena (like supernova explosions) in one month than the entire
astronomical community found in a whole year,” Berger said by email.

But Berger is most excited about the potential for PS1's far-gazing eye
to discover entirely new kinds of space events.

“I suspect that in the coming months and years we will find new kinds
of stellar explosions that will teach us about the final moments in the
lives of stars and about the birth of black holes and neutron stars,”
he said. “This will take us a long way along the path of charting the
heavens, both in space and in time.

“We will also be able to map the solar system in much greater detail
than was previously possible and to study the formation of the Milky
Way galaxy through observation at an unprecedented sensitivity.”

www.AstroDigi.com (Nino Guevara Ruwano)

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Posted By NINO to en.ASTRODIGI.com at 6/24/2010 04:35:00 PM

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