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Rubin Observatory starts realtime monitoring of the sky with alerts

a day ago
  • #astronomy
  • #Rubin-Observatory
  • #cosmic-discoveries
  • Astronomers received 800,000 alerts about new asteroids, exploding stars, and other cosmic changes from the Rubin Observatory in Chile.
  • The Rubin Observatory's Alert Production Pipeline, developed at the University of Washington, will eventually produce up to seven million alerts per night.
  • The alerts enable rapid follow-up observations of rare and unusual astronomical events.
  • Rubin Observatory will soon begin its 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST), capturing nightly images of the Southern Hemisphere sky.
  • The UW's Institute for Data Intensive Research in Astrophysics & Cosmology (DiRAC) played a key role in developing the alert system.
  • Rubin's alerts help scientists study supernovae, track asteroids, and investigate dark matter and dark energy.
  • Data from Rubin is processed in California within minutes, allowing for real-time public alerts.
  • The alerts are publicly accessible, enabling global collaboration among researchers and citizen scientists.
  • Rubin Observatory is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy.