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NEWS by Sean Walker
Imaging Mercury
Using the 4.1-meter SOAR Telescope stopped down to 1.35 meters, astronomer Gerald Cecil and undergraduate Dmitry Rashkeev managed to resolve details as small as 15 km across on March 23 and April 1, 2007. Click on the image to display the resulting map compared with earlier radar maps.
G. Cecil (University of North Carolina)
Gerald Cecil and undergraduate Dmitry Rashkeev installed an aperture mask over the front of the 4.1-meter SOAR Telescope at Cerro Pachon, Chile, that stopped the scope down to a 1.35-meter, f/38 telescope. Their "advanced webcam" consisted of a specialized camera with 10-micron pixels capable of recording 140 frames per second. The entire system offers a theoretical resolution of 0.06 arcsecond per pixel.
The SOAR telescope with 1.35-meter off-axis aperture mask.
G. Cecil (University of North Carolina)
Although NASA's Messenger spacecraft is due to make its first flyby of the elusive planet in January 2008, results like these can help discover regions of particular interest. Already, the team's new map shows bright splotches thought to be fresh craters 15 to 150 km across, as well as darker regions at mid-latitudes associated with ancient lava flows.
Posted by Sean Walker, October 8, 2007
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all comments (2 total)
Preprint
Posted by Scott C. Schumacher
October 8, 2007 At 11:27 PM PDT
The preprint for this article is available here.
cosmos
Posted by clatot
January 20, 2008 At 11:34 PM PST
this is the number for planets! MARS : 515 , SOLEIL : 666
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comments (2)