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Thread: MW@H Release new photo of Universe!

  1. #1
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    MW@H Release new photo of Universe!

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-12167011

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    Astronomers have released the largest ever colour image of the whole sky, stitched from seven million images, each made of 125 million pixels.

    The Sloan Digital Sky Survey's latest effort tops its own record, published publicly for professional astronomers and "citizen scientists" alike.

    Data from Sloan has helped to identify hundreds of millions of cosmic objects.

    The release was announced at the 217th annual meeting of the American Astronomical Society in Seattle, US.

    Researchers have released an animation on YouTube demonstrating how the incredibly high-resolution image is represented on the celestial sphere.

    Michael Blanton, a New York University physicist who presented the work on behalf of the Sloan team, told the conference that it was difficult to overstate the breadth of data Sloan provided.

    "There's something like 3,500 papers that have been written on the basis of this data set," he said.

    "A few dozen of them are being presented right now, this week at this meeting. They cover topics from the very smallest stars to the most massive black holes in the universe."
    Marek Kukula, Royal Greenwich Observatory: "You can see individual stars, galaxies - the detail is incredible"

    Nearly half a billion stars and galaxies have already been discovered and described thanks to Sloan images, and the new release is sure to significantly increase that number.

    Sloan data is also behind the Google Sky service, which allows users to scan the heavens in the same way as scanning their local streets, and the Galaxy Zoo project, which has allowed astronomy enthusiasts to characterise galaxies from their own computers.
    Digital record

    The workhorse behind the data set, a camera comprising 125 million pixels that long held the record for highest-resolution camera in the world, has been retired.

    Studies will now focus on spectrometry - unpicking new data on the basis of the colours of light that the upgraded equipment can detect.

    They include:
    the Baryon Oscillation Spectroscopic Survey, which will study the periodic ripples that were left behind in the early days of the Universe
    the Sloan Extension for Galactic Understanding and Exploration that measures the evidence of small galaxies on the edge of our Milky Way being swallowed up
    the APO Galactic Evolution Experiment, which will study red giant stars within our Galaxy to better understand the Milky Way's overall chemical recipe
    the Multi-object APO Radial Velocity Exoplanet Large-area Survey, which will spot giant planets outside our Solar System in a bid to better model how planets form

    But even the data that is already available, thanks to Tuesday's release, will keep astronomers of both the professional and the amateur variety busy.

    "You can compare it to the National Geographic Palomar Survey of the late 1950s," Dr Blanton said.

    "This is something that 50 years later is still a really important reference to astronomers; we use it ourselves to better understand our own images. SDSS is the digital version of that."
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  2. #2
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    so its an 875,000,000 megapixel image assuming no data was lost merging the 7 million images

    i wonder how that compares to images of our own world.
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    Intel C2Q Q9550 2.83ghz :: Intel DQ45CB :: 4 x 2gb OCZ DDR2 PC2-8500 Reaper HPC :: ASUS EAH5850 :: Thermaltake TR2 RX 750w :: Western Digital Caviar Black 4 x 750gb in RAID 10
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    Quote Originally Posted by Manicdan View Post
    so its an 875,000,000 megapixel image assuming no data was lost merging the 7 million images

    i wonder how that compares to images of our own world.
    ask the military :P they could probably watch you drop a motherboard screw from space
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by masterg View Post
    ask the military :P they could probably watch you drop a motherboard screw from space
    I don't know about the motherboard screw, but they could definitely watch the motherboard itself fall.

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    sorry for hijacking! but is a 7700 series worth the money or should i go with a 6800 series? do you know where i can find info/stats on that. searched the net but hasnt turned up anything. and the stuff that i found was normalised to the best card from amd and nvidia and it lacked newer models.


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  7. #7
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    Haschioz: A 6850/6870 does NOT support the required double-precision FP calculations. An HD7750/7770 DOES support it, but the calculations are ridiculously slow--it's practically a software solution. My HD 5850 did something like 100K BOINC PPD; you'd probably be lucky to see 10-20K BOINC PPD from those cards. Go with an HD6950-1GB--a bit more than the HD6870's but with DP-FP support.

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  8. #8
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    damn it, why dont they support it. it would be a perfect choice! and thank you for the fast reply!


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  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by haschioz View Post
    damn it, why dont they support it. it would be a perfect choice! and thank you for the fast reply!
    n/p. I had accumulated 20M with MW@H. As we both know, in 3D, the HD6870 is about as fast as an HD5850. The HD7700's, on the other hand, are more akin to the HD5700's/HD6700's in 3D performance.

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