Posts Tagged ‘Gallery’

Features in the Gallery: Looking at the Big Picture

Monday, December 15th, 2008

This image from 2008-12-10 09:39:28 is pretty interesting…

SkyView COMPTEL image

It looks like we are seeing some very special object with rings around it. What’s going on here?

This is a COMPTEL image, one of the lowest resolution surveys we have in SkyView. It’s taken in the hard X-ray/Soft gamma ray regime where it’s very difficult to build an imaging detector at all. The method used requires a complex deconvolution and yields at best a resolution of a few degrees. So the pixels are very large and the image would - absent distortions - cover almost the entire sky. However, you can’t project such a large region of the sky onto a single plane image without very large distortions. In fact the default projection that SkyView uses, the Tangent plane or Gnomonic projection, only shows half the sky no matter how big we make our image. The great circle 90 degrees from the center of the field of view is off at infinity. It’s rather like the way Mercator maps get enormously distorted as you near the poles — and even so you can never quite get there.

The middle of the image is reasonable enough, but as we approach the edges pixels are being stretched out in a radially symmetric pattern.

Another projection can show the whole sky in a more understandable fashion. One might try an Aitoff or Cartesian projection if you know that you want to see the entire sky. However if you want to make sure that a given point is at the center of the map, then something like the ZEA (for Zenithal Equal Area) projection might be nice. Here we’ve redone the picture in that projection:

Comptel data: ZEA projection

The entire sky is shown here with the point opposite the requested center forming an infinitesimally thin ring around the image. So it is still distorted, but in a way that doesn’t obscure the global features as much. Every pixel represents the same area in the sky. The plane of our Galaxy shows up clearly as a circle of enhanced emission and the bright spot is the Crab nebula.

The lesson here is that you need to adapt your projection to the application. Some projections, e.g., the Tangent or Sine projections just won’t do very well for large fields of view. Others, e.g., the Cartesian projection near the pole, can be a poor choice when looking at a particular small region of the sky.

Features in the Gallery: Worms in Space

Wednesday, December 10th, 2008

This image from 2008-12-06 15:57:53

DSS image

shows a very interesting feature that looks like a giant worm squirming amongst the stars. In fact it’s actually a tiny hair that got on the photographic plate sometime in the process of taking, developing or scanning the image.

How can we tell that this isn’t Nobel-Prize-winning stuff? The obvious giveaway is how thin the feature is. The stars in the image are point sources blurred by optical limits, telescope jitter, and especially seeing. Any real astronomical source can be no sharper than they. Our worm is much thinner.

Hairs and dust show up occasionally on all of the surveys scanned from optical plates.

Features in the Gallery: Very Bright Stars

Monday, December 1st, 2008

Lots of people are using the Image gallery. One popular theme is to find images that look very peculiar. E.g., look at the image in the gallery from 2008-11-29 19:02:44

Gallery: 2008-11-29 19:02:44

This is a very peculiar looking field in the DSS. It looks very pixelated, but it’s a normal sized image so the pixels are much larger than the actual image pixels. There are few if any stars visible? What’s going on?

We can find out by zooming out and doing a full square degree region around the same center: 101.35626366727445,-16.713875539779025. This gives us the image we see at 2008-12-01 16:59:43 in the gallery.

Gallery: 2008-12-01 16:59:43

The image is actually the center of a massive burnt out region in the underlying photographic plate. We’re looking at Sirius! A big (40″) telescope, extremely sensitive emulsion and long exposure don’t mix well with the brightest star in the sky. The scattered light from Sirius is still affecting the data over this entire square degree but at least at this scale we can see the cause and at the edges we can begin to pick up other objects in the field. So don’t expect to see very bright stars in most of the optical surveys. They are a billion times brighter than the objects that these surveys were intended to detect.

  • Categories

  • Tags