APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

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Expand view Topic review: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Sat Mar 29, 2014 6:15 am

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercury_cadmium_telluride
Wikipedia wrote:HgCdTe or mercury cadmium telluride (also cadmium mercury telluride, MCT, MerCad Telluride, MerCadTel, MerCaT or CMT) is narrow direct bandgap zincblende II-VI ternary alloy of CdTe and HgTe with a tunable bandgap spanning the shortwave infrared to the very long wave infrared regions. The amount of cadmium (Cd) in the alloy (the alloy composition) can be chosen so as to tune the optical absorption of the material to the desired infrared wavelength. CdTe is a semiconductor with a bandgap of approximately 1.5 eV at room temperature. HgTe is a semimetal, hence its bandgap energy is zero. Mixing these two substances allows one to obtain any bandgap between 0 and 1.5 eV.
I think I would be hard pressed to find another article in Wikipedia with more jargon. "This here takes infrared pictures."

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Mar 28, 2014 11:38 pm

geckzilla wrote:I just read something really cool about JWST's detectors. They are not CCDs and they can partially correct for cosmic rays. So far I don't know what the detectors are called. They are just calling them detectors or the focal plane assembly, which isn't very specific.
The primary imager uses a mosaic of fairly conventional HgCdTe arrays. They operate in two different wavelength bands. By constructing the entire array as a mosaic, they can do some interesting things- fast readout of a small area, for instance, can allow the camera to act as a wavefront sensor, correcting the position of the mirror segments.

The sensors function similarly to CCDs, in that no timing information is present, only the knowledge that a photon arrived between the start and end of the exposure (typically a long interval). But it is possible to place the same target on different parts of the array, to allow simultaneous imaging at the long and short wavelength bands. There is no processing on the sensor, so I doubt there is any ability to compensate for cosmic rays at the detector level. However, when you you have simultaneous collection of data on two sensor arrays, cosmic rays are readily identified by simple post processing, either as the data is read or afterward. But I don't think there's any way to restore the data lost to a cosmic ray hit.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Fri Mar 28, 2014 11:05 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
geckzilla wrote:I have often imagined that some cleverly-written software could selectively reject areas of obvious cosmic ray hits if the data were somehow constantly streaming instead of delivered all at once. This is probably a manifestation of my lack of real understanding about how CCD's work, though.
I can certainly imagine something like that, although not with a CCD. But you could have some hypothetical new type of detector that output a signal each time a photon hit it, containing the time and coordinates of that event. With such a rich dataset, all sorts of interesting processing would be possible. With a CCD (and other current spatial detectors), however, most of the time information is lost. At best, you can determine that a certain number of photons hit a specific pixel between two known times, where the difference in those times is typically large compared to the time between photon strikes.
I just read something really cool about JWST's detectors. They are not CCDs and they can partially correct for cosmic rays. So far I don't know what the detectors are called. They are just calling them detectors or the focal plane assembly, which isn't very specific.
http://www.stsci.edu/jwst/doc-archive/handbooks/

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by MarkBour » Sun Nov 24, 2013 2:18 am

Thanks for continuing to answer. There is just so much one can learn from you folks !
Here's another blown-up bit from that image. I took from pixel (1500,2100) for about 140w x 130h pixels.
Now that's what I call a constellation! I'd call it the serpent if I lived in the vicinity.
Attachments
From APOD of 2013-11-19
From APOD of 2013-11-19

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Nitpicker » Fri Nov 22, 2013 10:28 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
Anthony Barreiro wrote:Such a detector is no longer purely hypothetical.

http://www.skyandtelescope.com/communit ... 70371.html
Indeed, detectors that work this way have been experimented with for a while now. They would also allow for interferometry using a pair of telescopes (which can currently only be done by tying those scopes together optically).

Still, I think it will be a while before we see optical detectors with a high spatial resolution and a large dynamic range that truly give information about each photon (time, position, energy). But I'm sure it will happen. It's "just" an engineering problem, not one of any fundamental physics. It's also something that would be immensely valuable for ordinary consumer cameras, and that's always good for driving development.
I'm glad to read this. Until now, I was under the impression that the money currently going into CMOS technology was going to end up winning the day across the board. Now I'm not so sure. Thanks Anthony and Chris.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 22, 2013 10:04 pm

Anthony Barreiro wrote:Such a detector is no longer purely hypothetical.

http://www.skyandtelescope.com/communit ... 70371.html
Indeed, detectors that work this way have been experimented with for a while now. They would also allow for interferometry using a pair of telescopes (which can currently only be done by tying those scopes together optically).

Still, I think it will be a while before we see optical detectors with a high spatial resolution and a large dynamic range that truly give information about each photon (time, position, energy). But I'm sure it will happen. It's "just" an engineering problem, not one of any fundamental physics. It's also something that would be immensely valuable for ordinary consumer cameras, and that's always good for driving development.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:59 pm

Nitpicker wrote:Intuitively (because I've got nothing else) it sounds like a job for lots of short exposures, with the new zero readout-noise sensors you mentioned a few weeks back.
Yes, but those detectors are still scanned in order to read them out. Since you'd need a readout time on the order of a few billion per second, you'd then have a pixel scan rate of trillions per second. I don't see that happening. So instead, I imaging a detector that simply provides data for every photon. The output rate would still be very high, of course.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Anthony Barreiro » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:56 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
geckzilla wrote:I have often imagined that some cleverly-written software could selectively reject areas of obvious cosmic ray hits if the data were somehow constantly streaming instead of delivered all at once. This is probably a manifestation of my lack of real understanding about how CCD's work, though.
I can certainly imagine something like that, although not with a CCD. But you could have some hypothetical new type of detector that output a signal each time a photon hit it, containing the time and coordinates of that event. With such a rich dataset, all sorts of interesting processing would be possible. With a CCD (and other current spatial detectors), however, most of the time information is lost. At best, you can determine that a certain number of photons hit a specific pixel between two known times, where the difference in those times is typically large compared to the time between photon strikes.
Such a detector is no longer purely hypothetical.

http://www.skyandtelescope.com/communit ... 70371.html

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Nitpicker » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:50 pm

Chris Peterson wrote:
geckzilla wrote:I have often imagined that some cleverly-written software could selectively reject areas of obvious cosmic ray hits if the data were somehow constantly streaming instead of delivered all at once. This is probably a manifestation of my lack of real understanding about how CCD's work, though.
I can certainly imagine something like that, although not with a CCD. But you could have some hypothetical new type of detector that output a signal each time a photon hit it, containing the time and coordinates of that event. With such a rich dataset, all sorts of interesting processing would be possible. With a CCD (and other current spatial detectors), however, most of the time information is lost. At best, you can determine that a certain number of photons hit a specific pixel between two known times, where the difference in those times is typically large compared to the time between photon strikes.
Intuitively (because I've got nothing else) it sounds like a job for lots of short exposures, with the new zero readout-noise sensors you mentioned a few weeks back.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:40 pm

geckzilla wrote:I have often imagined that some cleverly-written software could selectively reject areas of obvious cosmic ray hits if the data were somehow constantly streaming instead of delivered all at once. This is probably a manifestation of my lack of real understanding about how CCD's work, though.
I can certainly imagine something like that, although not with a CCD. But you could have some hypothetical new type of detector that output a signal each time a photon hit it, containing the time and coordinates of that event. With such a rich dataset, all sorts of interesting processing would be possible. With a CCD (and other current spatial detectors), however, most of the time information is lost. At best, you can determine that a certain number of photons hit a specific pixel between two known times, where the difference in those times is typically large compared to the time between photon strikes.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by neufer » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:27 pm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Airglow wrote:
<<Airglow (also called nightglow) is the very weak emission of light by a planetary atmosphere. This causes the night sky never to be completely dark, even after the effects of starlight and diffused sunlight from the far side are removed. The airglow phenomenon was first identified in 1868 by Swedish scientist Anders Ångström. The airglow at night may be bright enough to be noticed by an observer and is generally bluish in colour. To an observer on the ground it appears brightest at about 10 degrees above the horizon, because very low down, atmospheric extinction reduces the apparent brightness of the airglow.

Even at the best ground-based observatories, airglow limits the sensitivity of telescopes at visible wavelengths. Partly for this reason, space-based telescopes such as the Hubble Space Telescope can observe much fainter objects than current ground-based telescopes at visible wavelengths. For an 8 m unit Very Large Telescope telescope one needs 40 hours of observing time to detect a V=28 magnitude star through a normal V band filter, while the 2.4 m Hubble only takes 4 hours. Reducing the view field size can make fainter objects more detectable against the airglow; unfortunately, adaptive optics techniques that reduce the diameter of the view field of an Earth-based telescope by an order of magnitude only as yet work in the infrared, where the sky is much brighter.>>

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:24 pm

I have often imagined that some cleverly-written software could selectively reject areas of obvious cosmic ray hits if the data were somehow constantly streaming instead of delivered all at once. This is probably a manifestation of my lack of real understanding about how CCD's work, though.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:04 pm

geckzilla wrote:Thanks, Chris. To clarify one thing I said about things not getting lost in noise I just thought that given enough exposure time a space telescope would eventually be able to detect almost anything as opposed to noise hopelessly drowning things out no matter what.
Certainly, eliminating the sky background allows for vastly longer exposures in space than on Earth. But the best cameras still have some dark current noise which will limit the maximum possible exposure (whether broken into sub-exposures or not). And if a pixel is statistically more likely to be hit by a cosmic ray before it is hit by a photon from a dim object, that is obviously a fundamental limitation on sensitivity.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Fri Nov 22, 2013 9:01 pm

Thanks, Chris. To clarify one thing I said about things not getting lost in noise I just thought that given enough exposure time a space telescope would eventually be able to detect almost anything as opposed to noise hopelessly drowning things out no matter what.

I totally admit to posting that with the hope that you'd fix it up.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Fri Nov 22, 2013 8:54 pm

geckzilla wrote:Cosmic rays are transient so it is very easy to take several exposures and eliminate them completely. They only limit visibility if there's not enough exposures to eliminate them.
Exactly. So the ability to eliminate them depends on other decisions, which typically involve compromise. And the S/N is reduced in every part of the image where a cosmic ray has been removed.
They're not like noise at all.
Actually, they do represent an actual noise source, in the true mathematical sense. They are very like sky background noise. Consider some extreme example, where you need a very long exposure to detect a faint object. If the exposure requirement were so long that every pixel the object occupies were saturated by cosmic rays, that would certainly represent the loss of information to noise.
I don't think things really get lost in the noise.
That's exactly what they get lost in. The ultimate limit of detection is determined by the S/N.
Bigger telescopes would definitely have an advantage.
Ignoring the matter of optical resolution, bigger telescopes mean more photons in a given exposure time, which means improved S/N in that same time. In principle, there's no difference between using a larger aperture and using a longer exposure time. In practice, however, there are some noise sources that are a function of time- dark current noise and cosmic rays being two of them.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by neufer » Fri Nov 22, 2013 8:39 pm

geckzilla wrote:
Cosmic rays are transient so it is very easy to take several exposures and eliminate them completely. They only limit visibility if there's not enough exposures to eliminate them.
They're not like noise at all. I don't think things really get lost in the noise.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gurgen_Askaryan#Cosmic_rays_and_sound_waves wrote:
<<Gurgen Askaryan discovered and investigated in details various effects accompanying passage of high energy particles through dense matter (liquids or solids). He showed that hadron-electron-photon showers and even single fast particles may produce sound pulses. Ionization losses are quickly converted into heat, and the small region adjacent to trajectory undergoes quick thermal expansion thus generating sound waves. These results gave a new approach to the study of cosmic rays. Before, investigations of cosmic rays were based on direct interaction of cosmic ray particle with a detector. Askaryan’s results made it possible to detect showers and single particles using sound receivers situated at some distance from the event. Several years ago, the registration of energetic particles and showers with sound detectors in sea water was planned as an important part of global monitoring.>>

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Fri Nov 22, 2013 7:43 pm

Cosmic rays are transient so it is very easy to take several exposures and eliminate them completely. They only limit visibility if there's not enough exposures to eliminate them. They're not like noise at all. I don't think things really get lost in the noise. Things get lost in dust or in blindingly bright nearby objects or because they are moving away from us faster than the speed of light. Bigger telescopes would definitely have an advantage.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by MarkBour » Fri Nov 22, 2013 7:30 pm

Anthony Barreiro wrote:
geckzilla wrote:Cosmic rays, Mark. As in, they aren't actually objects.
Cosmic rays are objects -- very tiny objects, and very far away from the stars in the globular cluster. :wink:
Thanks. So, is this a limiting problem with all deep-space astronomy? What I guessed as "noise", is more accurately called cosmic rays? Is this always a background level in all astronomical imaging? Does it effectively limit the transparency of space, in terms of our ability to investigate ? (That is, even if space is perfectly transparent, and even if we were to put a telescope up next to Hubble that was a thousand times as powerful, or a million times as powerful, still there will be limits on our ability to detect signals because they will be lost in the noise.)

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Anthony Barreiro » Thu Nov 21, 2013 6:23 pm

geckzilla wrote:Cosmic rays, Mark. As in, they aren't actually objects.
Cosmic rays are objects -- very tiny objects, and very far away from the stars in the globular cluster. :wink:

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Thu Nov 21, 2013 6:14 pm

Cosmic rays, Mark. As in, they aren't actually objects.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by MarkBour » Thu Nov 21, 2013 6:04 pm

Here's a naive question. But, if one has much to learn, one needs to ask, right? I took a piece of the image and downloaded it, then zoomed it in 4x. If you are interested, it is from almost the upper right corner of this APOD image.
A 4x zoomed piece at the upper right
A 4x zoomed piece at the upper right
I see one nice bright blue star, and many smaller white and orange ones. I'm curious what the two yellow-green looking objects would be about midway vertically and off to the right in my excerpt. And I'm really curious if someone could tell me about the darker smaller dots as well. Lots of blue pixels that look too small to be stars. Are they just noise, or would someone who works with these images have different guidance as to what to make of those? And then there's one bright red spot that looks almost attached to a white star at the lower right.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Chris Peterson » Wed Nov 20, 2013 11:01 pm

neufer wrote:2) or "free range" so as have no sun and be in permanent night.
That might be better described as permanent twilight from the light of all the nearby stars.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by neufer » Wed Nov 20, 2013 10:47 pm

geckzilla wrote:
But the extra light would seem normal to any hypothetical life form on any hypothetical planet in a globular cluster. Curiously, if light levels were high enough, such a planet might not have such a sharp divide between nocturnal and diurnal creatures. Sleep might be very different and much less frequent.
Any planets would probably either be:
  • 1) so close to their sun as to be tidally locked into a permanent dayside or nightside

    2) or "free range" so as have no sun and be in permanent night.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by geckzilla » Wed Nov 20, 2013 8:28 pm

But the extra light would seem normal to any hypothetical life form on any hypothetical planet in a globular cluster. Curiously, if light levels were high enough, such a planet might not have such a sharp divide between nocturnal and diurnal creatures. Sleep might be very different and much less frequent.

Re: APOD: Globular Cluster M15 from Hubble (2013 Nov 19)

by Anthony Barreiro » Wed Nov 20, 2013 5:40 pm

Guest wrote:What would the night sky look like from a planet orbiting one of the center stars?
neufer wrote:There would be dozens of stars brighter than the brightest historical supernova
and perhaps a thousand stars brighter than Venus.
Guest wrote:8-) Sounds like it would be hard to sleep at night 8-)
neufer wrote:Probably not much brighter than a full moon.
The absence of a planet to sleep on would be more disturbing than the amount of ambient light. :|

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