What’s it like to spend a night at a huge telescope observatory? Jordi Busque recorded a brilliant timelapse of the Very Large Telescope (VLT) and the Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA). What makes this video unique is not only the exotic location in Chile, but the use of sound in the area rather than music.
The VLT has four main mirrors that are each 8.2 meters (27 feet) in diameter, and four auxiliary telescopes that are each 1.8 meters (six feet) in diameter. When working together as a large interferometer, the European Southern Observatory says, the telescopes can resolve the equivalent of two headlights on a car on the Moon.
ALMA also uses interferometry, but in this case it is spread across 66 antennas that can be put as far apart as 16 kilometers (9.9 miles). It focuses on submillimeter astronomy, which allows astronomers to look past items such as dust clouds to see planetary systems in formation.
You can see more of Busque’s work at this website.
The Orion Nebula is one of the brightest star-forming regions in the sky, easily visible…
The Perseverance rover captured images of a dust devil on Mars, which were used to…
Although humans have flown to space for decades, the missions have primarily been in low-Earth…
Twenty thousand years ago, a star in the constellation Cygnus went supernova. Like all supernovae,…
In 2009, astronomers watched a bizarre mystery unfold. An enormous star, with 25 times the…
The ongoing saga of the New Horizons mission—will it get truncated and its science team…