Transcrição abaixo da notícia...
"Google and NASA build a search engine for the universe"

Set atop Cerro Pachón Mountain in Chile, the LSST will be the largest survey scope of its kind, sequentially imaging nearly 20 billion astronomical objects in the night sky twice a week at least 2,000 times over the scope's 10-year lifetime. Google's role in this $350-million project (beyond the modest $25,000 annual dues payment) is still largely undefined, but Rob Pike, Google's principal engineer for the LSST, envisions a tool set akin to Google Earth, which combines a search tool with satellite imagery. So instead of killing time flying over your ideal vacation spot onscreen, you can opt for more productive surfing, such as scanning the skies for hazardous near-Earth asteroids.
HOW IT WORKS
One thousand times as powerful as previous telescopes, the LSST will survey the entire sky every three nights using a wide-angle mirror and a three-billion-pixel digital camera. As the telescope rotates on its base, the camera's 15-second exposures take in an area 50 times as large as the full moon. Software will compile three-dimensional imagery to produce time-lapse digital "movies" of the universe."
Cumprimentos,.:. Kr3at0r .:.
4 comentários:
Então... e patas??? Também dá para pesquisar Patas??? :P
pois... e boas!!!! lol
Patas, patas... eles n referem. A não ser que num planeta longínquo, existam algumas patas extra-terrestres.
Que tal...?!?!?
ok e grelo?? dakele q a gente gosta muito? hein? vms la direto ao assunto
eh eh eh eh
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