The Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) will survey the entire visible sky every week, creating an unprecedented public archive of data – about 6 million gigabytes per year, the equivalent of shooting roughly 800,000 images with a regular eight-megapixel digital camera every night, but of much higher quality and scientific value.
Its deep and frequent cosmic vistas will help answer
critical questions about the nature of dark energy and dark matter and aid
studies of near-Earth asteroids, Kuiper belt objects, the structure of our
galaxy and many other areas of astronomy and fundamental physics.
“With
189 sensors and over 3 tons of components that have to be packed into an
extremely tight space, you can imagine this is a very complex instrument,” said
Nadine Kurita, the project manager for the LSST camera at SLAC. “But given the
enormous challenges required to provide such a comprehensive view of the
universe, it’s been an incredible opportunity to design something so unique.”
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