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It's only a sharper moon. (Astronomy).


Astronomers Famous astronomers and astrophysicists include:

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  • Marc Aaronson (USA, 1950 – 1987)
  • George Ogden Abell (USA, 1927 – 1983)
 have taken what appears to be the sharpest image of the moon ever recorded from Earth. The image, which shows a small area on the rim of a 56-kilometer-wide lunar crater called Taruntius, resolves features as small as 130 meters across.

Scientists accomplished the feat by employing a computerized system, called adaptive optics, that automatically compensates for the blurring of images by our planet's turbulent atmosphere. Adaptive-optics systems normally work by keeping a bright guide star in sharp focus. If the computerized system can flex a telescope mirror rapidly enough and in just the right way to maintain the star's image as a point rather than a blur, it will also keep in focus other objects in the same field of view.

But just before sunrise last April 30, scientists working with an adaptive-optics system mounted on one of the four telescopes collectively known as the Very Large Telescope The Very Large Telescope Project (VLT) is a system of four separate optical telescopes (the Antu telescope, the Kueyen telescope, the Melipal telescope, and the Yepun telescope) organized in an array formation. Each telescope has an 8.2 m aperture.  in Paranal, Chile, decided to test the system in a different way. Instead of taking a pointlike star as their guide, they opted to use an extended object--a sunlit sun·lit  
adj.
Illuminated by the sun.

Adj. 1. sunlit - lighted by sunlight; "the sunlit slopes of the canyon"; "violet valleys and the sunstruck ridges"- Wallace Stegner
sunstruck
 lunar mountain. Locking onto a mountain located between Mare Foecunditatis and Mare Tranquillitatis Mare Tranquillitatis (Latin for Sea of Tranquility) is a lunar mare that sits within the Tranquillitatis basin on Earth's moon. The mare material within the basin consists of basalt in the intermediate to young age group of the Upper Imbrian epoch. , the optics system produced a spectacularly detailed image. The European Southern Observatory European Southern Observatory (ESO), an intergovernmental organization for astronomical research with headquarters in Garching, near Munich, Germany. The ESO began in 1962 as a consortium among Belgium, Denmark, France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Sweden.  released it Aug. 9.--R.C.
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Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Date:Aug 31, 2002
Words:210
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