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http://www.onorbit.com : Telescope Achieves Major Breakthrough Using Adaptive Optics (images)
Press release : medusa.as.arizona.edu : LBT Achieves Breakthrough with Adaptive Optics (images with no thumbs)
I can't link this video here, but is very nice :
Wiki : Large Binocular Telescope
Home page : http://medusa.as.arizona.edu/lbto/
Submitted by keithcowing on Tue, 06/15/2010 - 12:08
The next generation of adaptive optics has arrived at the Large Binocular Telescope (LBT) in Arizona, providing astronomers with a new level of image sharpness never before seen. Developed in a collaboration between Italy's Arcetri Observatory of the Istituto Nazionale di Astrofisica (INAF) and the University of Arizona's Steward Observatory, this technology represents a remarkable step forward for astronomy.
Until relatively recently, ground-based telescopes had to live with wavefront distortion caused by the Earth's atmosphere that significantly blurred the images of distant objects (this is why stars appear to twinkle to the human eye). While there have been advancements in adaptive optics technology to correct atmospheric blurring, the LBT's innovative system truly takes this concept to a whole new level.
In closed-dome tests beginning May 12 and sky tests every night since May 25, astronomer Simone Esposito and his INAF team tested the new device, achieving exceptional results. The LBT's adaptive optics system, called the First Light Adaptive Optics system (FLAO), immediately outperformed all other comparable systems, delivering an image quality greater than three times sharper than the Hubble Space Telescope using just one of the LBT's two 8.4 meter mirrors. When the adaptive optics are in place for both mirrors and their light is combined appropriately, it is expected that the LBT will achieve image sharpness ten times that of the Hubble.
Press release : medusa.as.arizona.edu : LBT Achieves Breakthrough with Adaptive Optics (images with no thumbs)
I can't link this video here, but is very nice :
Slow motion movie showing the transition from atmospheric blurring to correction by the LBT adaptive optics system. The higher resolution easily separates the two previously blended star images, and the third more distant object can be detected above the background because its light is also more concentrated.
Wiki : Large Binocular Telescope
The Large Binocular Telescope (LBT, originally named the Columbus Project) is located on 10,700-foot Mount Graham in the Pinaleno Mountains of southeastern Arizona and is a part of the Mount Graham International Observatory. The LBT is one of the world's highest resolution and most technologically advanced optical telescopes
Home page : http://medusa.as.arizona.edu/lbto/