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Astronomy

Coming Soon: World's Biggest Digital Camera and Its 3.2 Billion Pixel View of the Skies

Apr 24, 2012 09:53 PM

You're probably already impressed at someofthephotos amateur astrophotographers can capture with their 16-megapixel digital cameras. I know I am. That's why I'm beefing up my camera skills, so I can also take some amazing pictures of our skies above. But if you can take photos this good with a 16-megapixel camera, imagine what you could do with something a little bigger, say, 3.2 billion pixels! That's a whopping 200 times more pixels!

Camera lens with light reflections and a person standing beside it.

The killer 3.2-gigapixel Large Synoptic Survey Telescope (LSST) digital camera has been slowly becoming a reality over the last ten years. Now, it's finally received the green light from the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) to move into the next stage of development, which means the project is now starting their detailed engineering design, schedule, and budget phase.

Most funds for the construction come from the DOE, while they share the full costs and logistics with the National Science Foundation, along with public and private organizations and peoples, including Bill Gates and Charles Simonyi.

Designed by the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, the reflecting telescope and soon-to-be world's largest digital camera will digitally capture the widest, fastest, and deepest view of the night sky ever recorded. When it finally hits operational status, it and its 189 sensors and 3 tons worth of components will create a public archive of around 6 million gigabytes per year. That roughly equals 400,000 images shot every night by a regular 16-megapixel camera.

3D rendering of a mechanical engine component with colorful sections.

The amazing 8.4-meter LSST be "probing the mysteries of dark matter and dark energy, and opening a movie-like window on objects that change or move rapidly: exploding supernovae, potentially hazardous near-Earth asteroids, and distant Kuiper Belt Objects."

A starry night sky filled with various colored stars.

Though the primary mirror is being worked on as we speak, the major research equipment and facilities construction isn't set to start until 2014. Full operation isn't expected until 2022.

Timeline depicting fiscal years, milestones, and key phases from 2011 to 2023.

"This is the culmination of years of work by a large group of dedicated people," said SLAC's Steven Kahn, LSST deputy project director and leader of the DOE-funded effort on LSST. "I've personally been working on this since 2003, and it is tremendously satisfying to finally see this move forward to the point when we can begin to carry out the project."

Construction atop its final site atop Cerro Pachón in northern Chile is already underway.

A mountainous landscape with snow-capped peaks and rocky terrain.

This is what it will look like when complete:

Observatory building on rocky terrain under a clear blue sky.

All photos by LSST

The next big software update for iPhone is coming sometime in April and will include a Food section in Apple News+, an easy-to-miss new Ambient Music app, Priority Notifications thanks to Apple Intelligence, and updates to apps like Mail, Photos, Podcasts, and Safari. See what else is coming to your iPhone with the iOS 18.4 update.

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