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Vera Rubin: First pictures taken by world's largest digital camera released
The first images captured by the world's most powerful telescope have been photos were taken by the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) camera located at an observatory in the south American country of show the night sky in extraordinary detail, capturing clouds of gas and dust that are several thousand light years away. Scientists are due to reveal more pictures and videos taken by the camera this week.
What's the latest?
Scientists say the images reveal breathtaking views of star-forming regions as well as distant of the debut images is made up of 678 exposures taken over just seven shows the Trifid Nebula and the Lagoon Nebula - both located several thousand light-years from Earth, glowing in bright pinks against orange-red image reveals these nebulae within our Milky Way in great detail, with previously faint or invisible features now clearly image shows a view of the Virgo Cluster of galaxies, which is about 100 billion times the size of the Milky shows lots of bright stars in the foreground, as well as many galaxies in the aim to photograph the night sky every three days for ten years to show how stars and galaxies move and change over time.
What is the Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST) camera?
According to the Guinness Book of Records, the LSST is not only the largest digital camera but also the one with the highest resolution, which means it can take really detailed top-of-the-range phones have cameras with a resolution of up to 50 megapixels, whereas the LSST has a resolution of 3,200 you definitely can't carry this camera around with you. It's about the same size as a small car and weighs a massive 2, it is kept at the Vera C Rubin Observatory in Chile, attached to a powerful mountaintop location provides dark skies and dry air, which are ideal conditions for observing the images it will capture are so large that it would take 400 ultra-high-definition televisions to display one of them at full camera aims to take 1,000 images a night over the next 10 years and the project's mission is to catalogue 20 billion goal is to capture an ultra-wide and ultra-high-definition time-lapse record of our say the observatory will transform our understanding of the captured will help scientists answer questions about dark matter, the structure of the Milky Way and the formation of our Solar also think that if a ninth planet exists in our solar system, the telescope would find it in its first year.