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2400 new eyes on the sky to see cosmic rainbows
by Staff Writers
Tokyo, Japan (SPX) Nov 14, 2022

The new instrument for capturing cosmic rainbows mounted on the top of the Subaru Telescope.

The Subaru Telescope successfully demonstrated engineering first light with a new instrument that will use about 2400 fiberoptic cables to capture the light from heavenly objects. Full operation is scheduled to start around 2024. The ability to observe thousands of objects simultaneously will provide unprecedented amounts of data to fuel Big Data Astronomy in the coming decade.

In addition to cameras, astronomers also use instruments known as spectrographs to study celestial object. A spectrograph breaks the light from an object into its component colors, in other words it creates a precise rainbow. Studying the strengths of the different colors in the rainbow from an object can tell astronomers various details about the object such as its motion, temperature, and chemical composition.

This new instrument, called PFS (Prime Focus Spectrograph), breaks visible light rainbows into two components: the red side and the blue side. So it might be more correct to refer to the data sets as half-rainbows. Combined with a third kind of detector which can see the infrared light invisible to humans, that makes one-and-a-half rainbows for an object studied with all three types of detectors.

Together with a widefield camera (HSC: Hyper Suprime-Cam), PFS will help launch the Subaru Telescope 2.0 project which will reveal the nature of dark matter and dark energy, structure formation in the Universe, and the physical processes of galaxy formation and evolution.


Related Links
NAOJ
Stellar Chemistry, The Universe And All Within It


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STELLAR CHEMISTRY
How MIRI became Webb's coolest instrument
Paris (ESA) Nov 09, 2022
The NASA/ESA/CSA James Webb Space Telescope is widely referred to as the successor to the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. In reality, it is the successor to a lot more than that. With the inclusion of the Mid-InfraRed Instrument (MIRI), Webb also became a successor to infrared space telescopes such as ESA's Infrared Space Observatory (ISO) and NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope. At mid-infrared wavelengths, the Universe is a very different place from the one we are used to seeing with our eyes. Stret ... read more

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