Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/04/02

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Subject: [Leica] landscape photography - off off topic
From: Alex Brattell <alex@zetetic.co.uk>
Date: Sat, 03 Apr 1999 01:09:04 +0000

So hard to tell if something's an April Fools joke nowadays.
Thought this might inspire anyone who's getting bored photographing the
neighbourhood, and it's something to do with those Japanese
lenses..................

(via American Astronomical Society)

	ANN ARBOR---A low-cost, automated telescope built from recycled
lenses and hardware is giving scientists important new information about
gamma ray bursts---brief emissions of high-energy photons traveling to
Earth from violent explosions in the deepest reaches of space.
	Astronomers from the University of Michigan and the Department of
Energy's Los Alamos and Livermore National Laboratories will describe
these new details---including their measurements of the brightest optical
celestial object ever recorded---in the April 1 issue of the science
journal Nature.
	The Nature paper presents analyses of measurements from a gamma
ray burst observed Jan. 23 by a telescope called ROTSE-1, for Robotic
Optical Transient Search Experiment.  ROTSE-1, responding to a detection
signaled by NASA's Compton Gamma Ray Observatory, captured optical
emissions from the burst while the gamma rays were still arriving---the
first time such an observation has ever been made---and recorded the burst
while the optical emission was still peaking.  Previous detections of the
optical counterparts of gamma ray bursts have caught only the faint, fading
afterglow of the event.
	"It's like the difference between watching two cars collide and
coming on the accident scene several hours later," said Carl Akerlof, U-M
professor of physics.  "In the first case, you have a much better chance
of understanding what caused the crash."
	ROTSE-1 uses four 35-mm telephoto lenses "of a variety favored by
paparazzi for photographing elusive subjects under dim light conditions,"
Akerlof said.  The 4-inch-diameter lenses are connected to charge-coupled
devices---basically the same technology found in digital cameras now on
the consumer market.  To reduce costs, ROTSE's components were gathered
from junk yards, used-camera shops and the amateur astronomy market.
	The four cameras, strapped to a single mount, point to slightly
different, but overlapping, sections of the sky.  Together they capture
250 square degrees of the sky at once, about what would be covered by a
dinner plate held at arm's length.  Under computer control, ROTSE-1
automatically scans from horizon to horizon, taking a series of short
exposures that together cover the entire visible night sky.  In clear
weather, ROTSE can compile a complete sky record twice each night.  But
the telescope also is designed to respond immediately to unexpected events
flaring in the night sky.
	On Jan. 23, ROTSE-1 interrupted its normal sky search after the
orbiting Compton Gamma Ray Observatory spotted a powerful emission of
gamma rays, triggering an automated alert network.  Ten seconds after the
CGRO detection, ROTSE-1 aimed itself at the estimated location of the
outburst and recorded a series of seven images over 10 
minutes, beginning 22 seconds after the initial detection of gamma rays.
	Akerlof and his colleagues used a precise location provided by the
European satellite Beppo-Sax to locate the optical transient in their
images.  After a short time the team was able to reject other possible
sources for the signal, such as flare stars, meteors or Earth-orbiting
satellites.  After completing this analysis, the team broadcast a
worldwide announcement via the Internet.
	From ROTSE-1's first exposure to the second, the optical
brightness increased about 16-fold.  At its peak brightness the object,
estimated to be 9 billion light-years from Earth, was about 6 million
times brighter than a typical supernova---an exploding star that can by
itself briefly outshine an entire galaxy.
	The ROTSE-1 observation represents the most luminous optical
object ever detected. "If you had been gazing at that spot with
binoculars, you would have seen a 'star' appear, brighten, and fade within
minutes, an unbelievably violent event from the very edge of our
universe," said Galen Gisler, an astrophysicist at Los Alamos National
Laboratory.
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