It took five years of painstaking work to provide such an image which has the distinction of being the most impressive. The Milky Way is revealed as no one had discovered and this release is the result of the work of the University of Ruhr. The image, which can be explored on a dedicated website, weighs 196 GB and has a resolution of 46 billion pixels. This file is the largest image of space ever created. To find out the snapshot of the Milky Way, a little patience is needed because the file weighs anyway 196 GB. The wait will be rewarded, as the cliché invites you to dive into the heart of this section of the southern sky. The requested job was long and especially careful, because the picture was so impressive that the German scientists were forced to divide it into 268 sections. The researchers made this picture in order to identify ” objects with variable light intensity “, located close to our Galaxy, explains the site. These brightness variations could indeed be a sign of extraterrestrial life, according to some scientists. With this process, the university obtained a mosaic to recreate the splendor of the Milky Way, the sections were assembled, which provided a 46 billion pixels file. This fineness of the image explains the weight of the interactive picture that has the advantage to dethrone the previous record. NASA had originally been a similar observation, but already very impressive shot only put forward 20 billion pixels. Some will question on such use. Researchers now have the opportunity to identify with real finesse the presence of objects. They are revealed through a light intensity and the film is so accurate that it is possible to observe them with ease. This gigantic photo has already allowed researchers found that 50,000 objects had not been referred to the previous image. All the pictures were taken in Chile, above the Observatory Cerro Armazones. Therefore, it is only a small portion of the Milky Way as can be seen in the skies of the Southern Hemisphere. The objective of this mammoth task? Discern “variable stars”, according to Rolf Chini, Director of the study. In other words, astronomers have sought to identify the stars whose brightness evolves over periods shorter or longer. <- share buttons by mashshare.net - version: 2.4.5>
268 sections of the Milky Way was required
An interactive mosaic dedicated to Internet
A photo that identifies 50,000 new objects
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