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World's 'Most Advanced' Camera Will Hunt for Alien Worlds

A new type of camera developed by U.S. researchers will allow astronomers to directly image planets around nearby stars in the search for another Earth.
The camera, called DARKNESS (the DARK-speckle Near-infrared Energy-resolved Superconducting Spectrophotometer), relies on extremely sensitive superconductor detectors to gather light from distant worlds.
According to physicist Ben Mazin, from the University of California, Santa Barbara, who led the team developing the camera, current optical and near-infrared telescopes use cameras with semi-conductor detectors — the same type that can be found in cellphones and digital cameras. [How Do You Spot an Alien Planet from Earth? (Infographic)]

But semiconductor sensors, Mazin said, have certain limitations that make it difficult for this technology to image faint objects — such as distant stars and planets in their vicinity — a problem that he hopes the novel technology in the DARKNESS camera, based on super-conducting detectors, will solve.

"When a single photon with the energy of more than 1 electron volt hits a semiconductor detector, it frees one electron," said Mazin. "In a superconducting detector, it frees something like 5,000 or 10,000 electrons. And since there are many more electrons to measure, we can do things that you can't do with the semiconductor detector."

DARKNESS' new technology, called microwave kinetic inductance detectors (MKIDs), works at extremely low temperatures, only a tenth of a degree above absolute zero, said Mazin. The superconductor, made of platinum silicide, acts like an inductor, an electrical component that stores energy in a magnetic field, and works in conjunction with a capacitor, which stores energy in the form of an electric field, to form an oscillator, an electric circuit that can detect signal at a particular frequency.

When a photon hits the superconductor, it "shifts the resonance frequency of the oscillator," said Mazin. "We measure this shift to determine when a photon comes in and how much energy it had."

Thanks to its sensitivity, the 10,000-pixel DARKNESS camera enables the direct imaging of planets in the vicinity of nearby stars by detecting the light they reflect. The famous exoplanet hunter the Kepler telescope relied on an indirect method, called the transit technique, which detects the dip in the star's brightness as a planet passes in front of it.

"The transit technique is great, but you need to have a perfect alignment of the planet and the star to see it transit," said Mazin. "Only about 1 percent of stars show transits. They are very rare."

Another indirect technique for detecting exoplanets measures changes in the radial velocity of the star — its tiny wobbles — and the influence of an orbiting planet.

The direct-imaging technique used by the DARKNESS camera, could, Mazin said, be the most versatile planet-finding process.

"It actually takes a picture of the star and the planet," said Mazin. "You can [even] get a spectrum of the planet, but it's extremely technically challenging."

The camera has so far been tested in four runs on the 5-meter (16 feet) Hale telescope at the Palomar Observatory near San Diego. Mazin said the biggest obstacle the instrument needs to overcome is the Earth's atmosphere, which causes the twinkling seen in stars.

"We are trying to look for a tiny, little point of light right next to a bright light, and the atmosphere just blurs it all into one giant blob," said Mazin. "We are using an adaptive optic system, which is a rubber mirror and a wave-front sensor, which measures the atmosphere and changes the mirror 2,000 times per second to take out that atmospheric distortion."

Later this year, the researchers plan to deploy an even larger, 20,000-pixel camera on an 8-m (26 feet) telescope at Mauna Kea in Hawaii.

"Going from a 5-m to an 8-m telescope is a big improvement in what you can see," said Mazin. "Mauna Kea is the best site in the world for this kind of work, and we hope that the 8-m telescope in combination with a very powerful adaptive optic system will allow us to start finding more planets and for the first time start seeing planets in reflected light."

Mazin said he hopes the technology will be used in the future 30-m (98 feet) telescopes, which will be powerful enough to read the spectrum of the reflected light from exoplanets around nearby stars and look for signatures of life in those worlds' atmospheres.

Super-conducting detectors have previously been used in sub-millimeter telescopes and telescopes measuring cosmic microwave background; however, scaling them up has so far been challenging, said Mazin.

The new work was detailed in April in the journal Publications of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific.

source : https://www.space.com/40600-most-adv...n-planets.html

NASA’s INCREDIBLE VIRTUAL PLANET SIMULATOR

NASA has made this incredible virtual planet simulator. The Exoplanet Travel Bureau drops you into vastly different star systems to explore distant worlds. we can enjoy the virtual sights thanks to NASA - apparently these even work in one of those fancy virtual reality headsets. The whole thing is imaginary, but wonderful.

Go here : https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/alien-wo...el_bureau=true

Quote:

Originally Posted by sparky@home (Post 4406240)
NASA’s INCREDIBLE VIRTUAL PLANET SIMULATOR
Go here : https://exoplanets.nasa.gov/alien-wo...el_bureau=true

Thank you for keeping this thread alive. I thoroughly enjoy reading your posts and gems of knowledge. One day hopefully not only will we find life on other planets and heavenly bodies but also it may be in a form we cannot comprehend right now - bubbles of gas and liquids swirling. On another note - are we I mean our human body merely a spaceship with the chormosones the real life who move from one spaceship (mother) to another (child)....!!

Tour of the Moon in 4K

The footage dubbed as “virtual tour of the moon” in breathtaking 4K has been collected by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter spacecraft over a span of nine years.

“The tour visits a number of interesting sites chosen to illustrate a variety of lunar terrain features,” Ernie Wright of NASA’s Space Visualization Studio explained in a blog post. “Some are on the near side and are familiar to both professional and amateur observers on Earth, while others can only be seen clearly from space.”

https://youtu.be/nr5Pj6GQL2o

Quote:

Originally Posted by sparky@home (Post 4408892)
Tour of the Moon in 4K

This one is truly amazing. Thanks a lot for sharing. My 9 year totally loved it.

Because a fact seems strange to you, you conclude that it is not one. ... All science, however, commences by being strange. On reading this CIA document which was released for public viewing, does prove truth is stranger than fiction. This is an old one which I am posting here, I could not find any threads similar to this, and therefore posting here.

Link : https://www.cia.gov/library/readingr...00760001-9.pdf

Video : https://youtu.be/uCpD65wmh90

Mods : Kindly delete if not suitable.

Quote:

Originally Posted by sparky@home (Post 4428945)
Because a fact seems strange to you, you conclude that it is not one. ...

Wow! This is incredible. There are many such mysterious stories that are unsolved. I just got hold of a documentary series "NASA: unexplained files" that talks about many unexplained phenomena. Worth a watch!

Quote:

Originally Posted by KomS_CarLog (Post 4435823)
Wow! This is incredible. There are many such mysterious stories that are unsolved. I just got hold of a documentary series "NASA: unexplained files" that talks about many unexplained phenomena. Worth a watch!

Seeing your interest in space, you can check out this video. This is sort giving a glimpse if mankind has to colonize the galaxy, we will have to spend long times on board equally huge spaceships. To move thousands of people, and our ecosystem, to distant planets, will require not only giant ark-like star ships but entire fleets of them. Cheers.

https://youtu.be/9TteoCHmXTc

Thank you Sparky. I am yet to watch the video you suggested. Surely will do.

There is a very good documentary by Neil DeGrasse Tyson - "Cosmos". Wonderful 👍 I would recommend this for a watch.

A nice moon shot that I managed to take a few days ago. Planning for some more shots as the moon passes its phases

Figured this would be a good place to plug a few Milky Way time lapses I shot last month in Nubra Valley...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMQ1u2jd6Ps

Quote:

Originally Posted by caffeineAM (Post 4469735)
Figured this would be a good place to plug a few Milky Way time lapses I shot last month in Nubra Valley...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vMQ1u2jd6Ps

Thank you. Beautiful. Helps on realize we are but a speck of dust on a speck of dust.

Quote:

Originally Posted by caffeineAM (Post 4469735)
Figured this would be a good place to plug a few Milky Way time lapses I shot last month in Nubra Valley...

Wow. I'm speechless. Please upload more such videos. I was taken back to my school days (Nainital) where we could see such clear night sky nearly everyday.

Quote:

Originally Posted by V.Narayan (Post 4469914)
Thank you. Beautiful. Helps on realize we are but a speck of dust on a speck of dust.

Quote:

Originally Posted by BoneCollector (Post 4469920)
Wow. I'm speechless. Please upload more such videos. I was taken back to my school days (Nainital) where we could see such clear night sky nearly everyday.

Thank you, glad you liked it! I had been there a decade back but only had a compact with me. This was my first ever Milky Way session, so was unsure how it would all turn out, so didn't stay out too long, regretfully. I've just got some software to clean up the noise. Will re-edit and upload a new one, not before next weekend though I'm afraid.

Japan's intrepid, hopping asteroid rovers have sent back footage and high-resolution imagery from the surface of Ryugu, a kilometer-wide asteroid that has been visited by the agency's Hayabusa spacecraft, according to tweets from Japan's space agency.

"Rover-1B succeeded in shooting a movie on Ryugu's surface! The movie has 15 frames captured on September 23, 2018 from 10:34 - 11:48 JST.

Enjoy 'standing' on the surface of this asteroid!"

https://youtu.be/YeKMlgElC0I

https://youtu.be/nXKgL7XCkkE


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