Salad

Vera C. Rubin Observatory alerts scientists to 800,000 new asteroids, exploding stars and other cosmic phenomena in just one night

The newly commissioned Vera C. Rubin Observatory has issued 800,000 astronomy alerts in just one night — a staggering number of nightly discoveries that is expected to grow nearly tenfold by the end of this year.

The telescope, which scans the full sky from its perch atop Cerro Pachón mountain in Chile, produced the alerts to direct scientists to “new asteroids, exploding stars, and other changes in the night sky,” representatives for the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF) said in a statement.

Related posts

‘It doesn’t lie. So who are you?’: What happens when DNA tests show a woman is not the mother of the child she gave birth to?

sys.admin

Groundbreaking new drug shows promise for treating children with a devastating form of epilepsy

sys.admin

Stone Age teenager was mauled by a bear 28,000 years ago, skeletal analysis confirms

sys.admin

Leave a Comment