Latest news with #LSSTCamera


India Today
4 days ago
- Science
- India Today
World's largest digital camera is ready to click at 3,200 megapixels
World's largest digital camera is ready to click at 3,200 megapixels 17 Jun, 2025 Credit: Rubin Observatory The Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile is home to the world's largest digital camera, designed to photograph the entire visible sky every few nights using its powerful 8.4-meter Simonyi Survey Telescope. The observatory's LSST Camera weighs about 3,000 kg (6,600 lbs), is the size of a small car, and features a 3,200-megapixel sensor—equal to the resolution of 260 modern smartphones. The camera's imaging power is so immense that a single photo would require hundreds of ultra-high-definition TV screens to display in full detail. The camera's sensors are kept at -100°C to ensure image clarity, and it can switch between six giant color filters (u, g, r, i, z, y) in under two minutes, allowing scientists to study the universe in multiple wavelengths. Over ten years, the observatory will create a time-lapse 'movie' of the night sky, helping astronomers study billions of galaxies, asteroids, and cosmic events, and unravel mysteries like dark matter and dark energy. Built at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California and shipped to Chile in 2024, the camera is scheduled for installation in early 2025, with its first images set to be released on June 23, 2025


India Today
4 days ago
- Science
- India Today
World's largest digital camera is about to release its first pictures
A moment that could change the world of astronomy and our understanding of the cosmos is set to unfold as the Vera C Rubin Observatory, with the world's largest camera, unveils its first telescope, which has been over two decades in the making, is designed to create the ultimate movie of the night sky using the largest camera ever built, repeatedly scanning the sky to create an ultra-wide, ultra-high-definition time-lapse record of our for the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, the LSST Camera weighs around 3,000 kilograms, roughly the size of a small car, yet about twice as heavy. It boasts a staggering 3,200-megapixel sensor, equivalent to the combined resolution of 260 modern smartphone cameras. Rubin Observatory's engineering test camera, the Commissioning Camera (ComCam) was removed from the telescope in December 2024. (Photo: VCO) The camera's sheer imaging power is unprecedented: it would take hundreds of ultra-high-definition TV screens to display a single photograph captured by this to peer deep into the cosmos, the camera will enable scientists to observe billions of distant galaxies and faint, nearby objects that were previously beyond ensure the highest image quality, the camera's sensors are kept at an extremely cold temperature of -100C, minimising the number of defective pixels and ensuring the clarity of each shot. The device is also equipped with a sophisticated filter system, allowing it to switch between six massive colour filters — each 75 centimetres across — in under two filters, labelled u, g, r, i, z, and y, span wavelengths from ultraviolet to infrared, granting the camera 'superhuman' vision and allowing astronomers to study the universe in unprecedented at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in California, the LSST Camera was shipped to Chile in May 2024 and is scheduled for installation on the Simonyi Survey Telescope in early 2025. NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory, located on a mountaintop in Chile, will revolutionise the way we explore the cosmos. (Photo: VCO) Once operational, the camera will work in tandem with the observatory's large mirrors, collecting and focusing cosmic light onto its powerful sensors. The resulting data will be transmitted worldwide for processing and capturing the sky in multiple colours over the next decade, the Rubin Observatory's camera will provide scientists with a treasure trove of information, helping to unravel mysteries about the universe's structure, evolution, and the nature of dark matter and dark anticipation builds for the camera's first images, the scientific community and the public alike await a new window into the cosmos. The pictures will be unveiled on June 23.