'Star Wars' generates sharper stellar images.They were conducting research on laser weapons, not trying to take the twinkle out of starlight. But the "Star Wars" studies that an Air Force laboratory and a university research team began a decade ago -- and kept secret until last week -- have yielded a laser system that corrects for the atmosphere's blurring of celestial objects. This technology promises to dramatically sharpen the images produced by some ground-based optical telescopes Several hundred more observatories (many optical) are listed here. Name Abbreviation Remarks Location Anglo-Australian Observatory AAO 3.9 metre Anglo-Australian Telescope, ANU's Siding Spring 2.3 m Telescope, 1. , potentially putting them on a par with costlier instruments that orbit above the interfering atmosphere. Already tested on small telescopes, the laser system could revolutionize infrared and visible-light astronomy from Earth, its developers reported last week in Seattle at a meeting of the American Astronomical Society The American Astronomical Society (AAS, sometimes pronounced "double-A-S") is a US society of professional astronomers and other interested individuals, headquartered in Washington, DC. . Ground-based astronomy is handicapped by distortions created when starlight travels through the atmosphere -- a turbulent hodgepodge of hot and cold air masses that constantly alters its refractive index A property of a material that changes the speed of light, computed as the ratio of the speed of light in a vacuum to the speed of light through the material. When light travels at an angle between two different materials, their refractive indices determine the angle of transmission . The rapidly changing index deforms the wavefronts of incoming starlight so that the radiation appears to twinkle and come from a fuzzy blob instead of a celestial point Noun 1. celestial point - a point in the heavens (on the celestial sphere) apex of the sun's way, solar apex, apex - the point on the celestial sphere toward which the sun and solar system appear to be moving relative to the fixed stars . Astronomers in Europe and Canada have made some headway in solving the problem with adaptive optics. This involves measuring ,the atmospheric distortion of light coming from a bright, easy-to-measure reference star near the celestial object of interest, then electrically deforming a flexible telescope mirror to optically compensate for the distortion. However, this technique has one key limitation: Most heavenly bodies don't reside near a bright reference star. Physicists now report they have overcome this limitation by mimicking the effects of a reference star with a powerful laser. The researchers shoot an intense laser beam some 90 kilometers into the atmosphere and measure its resulting distortion as gas particles reflect the light back to Earth. Although French scientists first publicly described such a theoretical laser-guide system in 1985, Robert C. Fugate says he and his colleagues had secretly conducted the first assays of atmospheric distortions in 1983. Fugate, of the Kirtland Air Force Base Kirtland Air Force Base is located in the southeast quadrant of Albuquerque, New Mexico, adjacent to the Albuquerque International Sunport. The base is the third largest installation in Air Force Materiel Command, covering 51,558 acres (209 km²) and employing over 23,000 people, in Albuquerque, N.M., reports performing these and later imaging experiments with a 15-meter telescope at Kirtland. Charles A. Primmerman and his group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Lincoln Laboratory MIT Lincoln Laboratory, also known as Lincoln Lab, is a federally funded research and development center managed by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and primarily funded by the United States Department of Defense. in Lexington made the first corrections for atmospheric turbulence with the aid of a laser beam in August 1988, working with a 60-centimeter telescope in Hawaii. The team initially used a laser at the White Sands Missile Range White Sands Missile Range (WSMR), formerly known as the White Sands Proving Grounds, is a rocket range in New Mexico operated by the United States Army. The range covers an area of almost 3,200 mi² (8 287 km²), approximately three times the size of Rhode Island, making it near Las Cruces Las Cruces (läs kr `sĭs), city (1990 pop. 62,126), seat of Dona Ana co., SW N.Mex., on the Rio Grande, in a farm area irrigated by the Elephant Butte system; founded 1848, inc. 1907. , N.M., to assess the relatively low-altitude concentrations of nitrogen and oxygen. In 1984, they extended their distortion measurements to the sodium layer, about 90 kilometers above Earth. Primmerman notes that for best results astronomers should use both laser light and a true reference star, since lasers cannot compensate for another atmosphere-induced phenomenon called wandering -- the apparent movement of an image. He adds that several artificial stars -- i.e., laser beams -- may be needed to eliminate distortion in flexible-mirror telescopes larger than 10 meters. Results presented at last week's meeting by Laird A. Thompson Laird A. Thompson (born 6 September 1947), is a professor of astronomy at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Thompson graduated with a B.A. in both physics and astronomy from the University of California, Los Angeles in 1969. He received his Ph.D. of the University of Illinois University of Illinois may refer to:
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