Stanford scientists work to create a high-definition movie of the cosmos
MENLO PARK, Calif. - It will be what is called "the greatest movie of the universe ever made."
It is an ambitious project involving scientists at Stanford University which will map our changing cosmos every night for an entire decade.
High in the mountains of Chile, what is known as the Vera C. Rubin observatory is currently under construction at an elevation of nearly 9,000 feet.
Inside the observatory is a camera built at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory and shipped to the mountaintop from California.
"It is the world's largest digital camera. We are actually in the Guinness Book of World Records," said Dr. Aaron Roodman, a professor of particle and astrophysics at SLAC and deputy director of the observatory, which is jointly run with the National Science Foundation.
"People are going to use the images to study dark energy, dark matter, the expansion of the universe, how galaxies form, how the solar system formed," Dr. Roodman said.
According to SLAC, each single image will be able to capture a slice of the sky about 45 times the size of the full moon.
By scanning the sky every night for over a decade, the camera will be able to capture faint objects and objects that change in position or brightness.
"Over 10 years, we expect to see every part of the Southern Hemisphere sky almost a thousand times," Dr. Roodman said.
In the end, scientists hope to create an ultra-wide, ultra-high-definition time-lapse record of the changing cosmos.
SLAC said in a news release that this is the "most comprehensive data-gathering mission in the history of astrophysics." The Rubin Observatory is expected to come online later in 2025.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


San Francisco Chronicle
10 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Cutting-edge astronomy facility with Bay Area ties releases incredible space photos
The Vera C. Rubin Observatory, a cutting-edge astronomy facility with Bay Area connections, unveiled its first images taken with its record-setting camera in a presentation Monday, including pictures of swirling galaxies and nebulae. The snapshots are a preview of what will be a 10-year movie of the cosmos that scientists say will enable significant scientific advances, including an inventory of the solar system and insights into dark matter and dark energy. 'This observatory is the greatest astronomical discovery machine ever built,' said Željko Ivezić, director of the Rubin Observatory's construction, during the presentation. The observatory is located atop Cerro Pachón, a mountain in central Chile. But its car-sized camera, the largest digital camera ever built, was constructed at Stanford's SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory in Menlo Park. It would take 400 ultra-high definition TV screens to display a single image taken by the 3,200-megapixel camera. Employees and visitors eagerly watched the First Look briefing at a SLAC auditorium in Menlo Park on Monday morning, breaking out in applause when images of galaxies appeared on screen. The new camera will take images of the entire southern night sky every three nights, for 10 years. Scientists expect to detect wandering asteroids and comets, supernovae, variable stars and exotic events, like stars being torn apart by black holes. Cataloging galaxies in the night sky also will provide insight into dark matter, a mysterious substance that scientists can't see, but affects the distribution of galaxies in the universe. This continuous movie is 'an astronomer's dream come true," said Andrew Fraknoi, an astronomy professor at the University of San Francisco. The observatory is named for Vera Rubin, an American astronomer whose pioneering work provided evidence for the existence of dark matter. The Rubin Observatory is a joint initiative of the U.S. National Science Foundation and U.S. Department of Energy's Office of Science, and operated by SLAC and NSF NOIRLab. 'The movie has started, the camera is running and we're going to see our cosmos unfold before us,' said U.S. Secretary of Energy Chris Wright in a short video.
Yahoo
14 hours ago
- Yahoo
First celestial images from 10-year project photographing the universe released
WASHINGTON – Like the first brush strokes on a massive canvas, the first images from the Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile are a glimpse at the larger picture of our universe to come. The $571-million National Science Foundation and Department of Energy facility on top of the summit of Cerro Pachon will create the largest astronomical movie yet of the Southern Hemisphere over 10 years, known as the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). On Monday, the Vera C. Rubin Observatory revealed its first images of the universe, taken over a period of hours, showcasing the incredible detailed imagery and scale the new facility is capable of. More images and video from these first-look images will be revealed at 11:30 a.m. ET during a live event in Washington. A high-definition stream will be shared live on YouTube here. Aaron Roodman, of Stanford University SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory, leader of the LSST camera team, said they chose areas of sky that would be "interesting" for these first images, but it almost didn't matter where they looked. "We're going to see changing objects," Roodman said. "We're going to see moving objects. We're gonna get a view of thousands and thousands of galaxies and stars in any field we look at. So, in some sense, we could have looked anywhere and gotten fantastic images." Who Was Vera Rubin? Dark Matter Astronomer's Legacy Continues Through New Observatory The observatory took two decades to complete and was named after the astronomer credited with the first evidence of dark matter. Many in the scientific community still believe Rubin was overlooked for the Nobel Prize. The brightly colored cosmic landscape below of the Trifid and Lagoon nebulae was taken over seven hours and a combined 678 images. According to the NSF, the clouds of gas and dust are visible due to this image's layering process. Rubin's powerful digital camera was used to capture the Virgo cluster within our home galaxy, the Milky Way. The image below shows two spiral galaxies sparkling in blue, and the ghostly hue of merging galaxies in the upper right. The Rubin Observatory took more than 1,100 images, showcasing about 10 million galaxies. The galaxy map is just .05% of the 20 billion galaxies that will be captured during the course of the 10-year LSST. The speed and power of this new science tool collects petabytes of data – there are more than 1,000 terabytes per petabyte – requiring machine-learning algorithms and data management to process it all. Deputy Director for Data Management Yusra AlSayyad said the telescope will take an image of the night sky every 30 seconds. "That's way too fast for a human to be in the loop and decide where we're going to observe tonight," AlSayyad said. You can think of it as a robotic telescope where we are going to use an automated scheduler. To choose the best parts of the sky to observe tonight, in order to achieve the survey goals that we want." As the LSST camera collects more data, AlSayyad said it will see rare celestial events, only discovered if AI is always article source: First celestial images from 10-year project photographing the universe released
Yahoo
17 hours ago
- Yahoo
Rubin Observatory's First Images Just Unveiled the Universe as We've Never Seen It Before
Editor's Note (6/23/25): This story will be updated with additional images and details shortly after 11 A.M. EDT. Welcome to a mind-blowing new era of astronomy. The long-awaited Vera C. Rubin Observatory, a cutting-edge new telescope perched atop a mountain in Chile, is releasing its first images of the universe on June 23—and its views are just as jaw-dropping as scientists hoped. (The observatory is holding a celebratory event today at 11 A.M. EDT to reveal additional images that you can watch a livestream of on YouTube. In addition, organizations are hosting watch parties open to the public around the world.) [Sign up for Today in Science, a free daily newsletter] The new images come from only 10 hours of observations—an eyeblink compared with the telescope's first real work, the groundbreaking, 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) project. On display are billowing gas clouds that are thousands of light-years away from our solar system and millions of sparkling galaxies—all emblematic of the cosmic riches that the observatory will ultimately reveal. 'In a lot of ways, it almost doesn't matter where we look,' said Aaron Roodman, a physicist at Stanford University and program lead for the Rubin Observatory's LSST Camera, in a preview press conference held on June 9. 'We're going to see changing objects; we're going to see moving objects; we're going to get a view of thousands and thousands of galaxies of stars in any field we look at,' he said. 'In some sense, we could have looked anywhere and gotten fantastic images.' In the end, the team decided to share several mosaics of images from the observatory that highlight its extremely wide field of view, which can capture multiple alluring targets in a single snapshot. The view above of the Triffid Nebula (top right) and Lagoon Nebula includes data from 678 individual images captured by the Rubin Observatory. Scientists stack and combine images in this way to see farther and fainter into the universe. The Triffid Nebula, also known as M20, and the Lagoon Nebula, also known as M8, are star-forming regions both located several thousand light-years away from Earth in the constellation Sagittarius. The observatory also captured an initial view of the Virgo Cluster, a massive clump of galaxies located in the constellation of the same name. Individual detail images (at top and below) show a mix of bright Milky Way stars against a backdrop of myriad more distant galaxies. In addition, the team has released a teaser video of a stunning zoomable view of some 10 million galaxies that was created by combining some 1,100 images taken by the new observatory. The Rubin Observatory has promised to reveal additional imagery during the unveiling event later today, including the full video of the massive view of countless galaxies and another video depicting the more than 2,000 asteroids the telescope has already discovered in just 10 hours of observations. These first glimpses from Rubin showcase the observatory's unprecedented discovery power. The telescope will survey the entire southern sky about once every three days, creating movies of the cosmos in full color and jaw-dropping detail. 'We've been working on this for so many years now,' says Yusra AlSayyad, an astronomer at Princeton University and the Rubin Observatory's deputy associate director for data management. 'I can't believe this moment has finally come.'