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"World's biggest laser pointer" to unravel mystery behind birth and death of stars.


Byline: ANI

Sydney, Jan 5 (ANI): Astronomers are using what they say is the "world's biggest laser pointer" to unravel the mystery behind the birth and death of stars.

According to a report in the Sydney Morning Herald, the international team of astronomers is led by Stuart Ryder from the Anglo-Australian Observatory, near Coonabarabran.

"We are using a laser 10,000 times more powerful than the ones you can have in NSW NSW New South Wales

Noun 1. NSW - the agency that provides units to conduct unconventional and counter-guerilla warfare
Naval Special Warfare
 (New South Wales New South Wales, state (1991 pop. 5,164,549), 309,443 sq mi (801,457 sq km), SE Australia. It is bounded on the E by the Pacific Ocean. Sydney is the capital. The other principal urban centers are Newcastle, Wagga Wagga, Lismore, Wollongong, and Broken Hill. )," said Ryder, who is seeking to explain a mystery threatening to undermine science's understanding of how stars are born and how they die.

The mystery is that about 250 million light years away, two galaxies are colliding, slamming massive clouds of gas together to give birth to new stars.

Large stars end their lives in massive explosions called supernovae. Inside the colliding galaxies, however, there is an absence of any stellar death.

"We are seeing only a few per cent of the supernovae we should be seeing," said Dr Ryder. "There should be many, many more stars dying," he added.

One possible explanation is that science's understanding of stars is wrong.

Another is that dying stars, "like cockroaches dying unseen under the couch Under the Couch (UTC) is a live music venue located at Georgia Tech beneath the Couch Building on West Campus. It is run by the Musician's Network (MN), a Georgia Tech student organization. UTC was established by the Musician's Network in 1995. ", are easily missed.

To discover which is right, Dr Ryder is using sophisticated new technology called laser guide star Laser guide stars are a form of artificial star created for use in astronomical adaptive optics imaging.

Adaptive optics (AO) systems require a wavefront reference source in order to correct atmospheric distortion of light (called "astronomical seeing").
 adaptive optics at the giant Gemini telescope, atop Hawaii's 4200-metre Mauna Kea.

Adaptive optics allows astronomers to produce extraordinarily sharp images by canceling the blurring effect of Earth's atmosphere, which also makes stars twinkle.

A 10-watt laser is blasted 90 kilometers into the sky, causing atoms to glow, creating "an artificial star".

The atmosphere also blurs the artificial star.

"We know what shape it ought to be," said Dr Ryder, adding that by watching it twinkle, they can plot the atmospheric distortions.

Computers then use the information to manipulate the telescope's galactic observations, removing the distortions.

By comparing Gemini images snapped this year with ones shot by the Hubble telescope in 2004, Dr Ryder's team, including Finnish and South African scientists, has already spotted one previously unseen supernova.

With only a third of the two-year project completed, he expects to find at least a dozen more.

"It shows we are on the right track," said Ryder.(ANI)

Copyright 2008 Asian News International The Asian News International (ANI) agency provides multimedia news to China and 50 bureaus in India. It covers virtually all of South Asia since its foundation and presently claims, on its official website, to be the leading South Asia-wide news agency.  (ANI) - All Rights Reserved.

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Publication:Asian News International
Geographic Code:8AUST
Date:Jan 5, 2009
Words:391
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