View Single Post
  #47   Report Post  
posted to alt.sailing.asa
[email protected] don234@lanode.com is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Sep 2008
Posts: 107
Default 35s5 Heart of Gold

On 3 Sep, 18:18, jeff wrote:
Donal wrote:

I'm astonished at how little light pollution
you have. I thought that you lived near NY????


Here is a photo of the same object that I took recently.
http://www.astroimaging.org.uk/tener.../donal/M31.htm


It isn't great, but it is only 36m exposure. I'll try to get
more on it if the sky ever clears.


Very impressive. I never get a sky like that near Boston. However,
here's a picture of the same object I took from a higher perspective.

http://mix.msfc.nasa.gov/IMAGES/MEDIUM/8000105.jpg

OK, I was not the lead scientist, but almost all of the data processing
software, from decoding the telemetry to putting the picture on the
display was written by me, and I was at the keyboard when the NASA
photographer took this picture of the screen. In '78 color displays
were so uncommon that we didn't pass around picture files, we
photographed the screen, usually with Polaroids, but 35mm for
publication. Each little red dot is actually one x-ray photon, focused
by a "grazing incidence mirror system." Magic! This picture was one of
the first we got of a nearby galaxy showing individual x-ray sources,
so it caused quite a stir.

More on the pic:http://mix.msfc.nasa.gov/abstracts.php?p=1560

and instrument:http://heasarc.gsfc.nasa.gov/docs/ei...ao2_about.html


I wasn't aware that x-ray imaging had been done so long ago. I
knew that the US x-ray imagers were very narrow field and high
resolution.

It must have been wonderful to see those images coming
in live. I really envy you.


Regards

Donal

--