Dark Energy Survey kicks off second season cataloging the wonders of deep space
With its second season underway, the DES team posts highlights and prepares to release images from its first year
On Aug. 15, with its successful first season behind it, the Dark
Energy Survey (DES) collaboration began its second year of mapping the
southern sky in unprecedented detail. Using the Dark Energy Camera, a
570-megapixel imaging device built by the collaboration and mounted on
the Victor M. Blanco Telescope in Chile, the survey’s five-year mission
is to unravel the fundamental mystery of dark energy and its impact on
our universe.
Along the way, the survey will
take some of the most breathtaking pictures of the cosmos ever captured.
The survey team has announced two ways the public can see the images
from the first year.
Today, the Dark Energy Survey relaunched Dark Energy Detectives, its
successful photo blog. Once every two weeks during the survey’s second
season, a new image or video will be posted to
www.darkenergydetectives.org,
with an explanation provided by a scientist. During its first year,
Dark Energy Detectives drew thousands of readers and followers,
including more than 46,000 followers on its
Tumblr site.
Starting on Sept. 1, the one-year anniversary of the start of the
survey, the data collected by DES in its first season will become freely
available to researchers worldwide. The data will be hosted by the
National Optical Astronomy Observatory.
The Blanco Telescope is hosted at the National Science Foundation's
Cerro Tololo Inter-American Observatory, the southern branch of NOAO.
In addition, the hundreds of
thousands of individual images of the sky taken during the first season
are being analyzed by thousands of computers at the National Center for
Supercomputing Applications (NCSA) at the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab), and
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. The processed data will also be
released in coming months.
Scientists on the survey will use these images to unravel the secrets
of dark energy, the mysterious substance that makes up 70 percent of
the mass and energy of the universe. Scientists have theorized that dark
energy works in opposition to gravity and is responsible for the
accelerating expansion of the universe.
“The first season was a resounding success, and we’ve already
captured reams of data that will improve our understanding of the
cosmos,” said DES Director Josh Frieman of the U.S. Department of
Energy’s Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and the University of
Chicago. “We’re very excited to get the second season under way and
continue to probe the mystery of dark energy.”
While results on the survey’s
probe of dark energy are still more than a year away, a number of
scientific results have already been published based on data collected
with the Dark Energy Camera.
The first scientific paper based on Dark Energy Survey data was
published in May by a team led by Ohio State University’s Peter
Melchior. Using data that the survey team acquired while putting the
Dark Energy Camera through its paces, they
used a technique called gravitational lensing to determine the masses of clusters of galaxies.
In June, Dark Energy Survey researchers from the University of Portsmouth and their colleagues
discovered a rare superluminous supernovain
a galaxy 7.8 billion light years away. A group of students from the
University of Michigan discovered five new objects in the Kuiper Belt, a
region in the outer reaches of our solar system, including one that
takes over a thousand years to orbit the Sun.
In February, Dark Energy Survey scientists
used the camera to track a potentially hazardous asteroid that approached Earth. The data was used to show that the newly discovered Apollo-class asteroid 2014 BE63 would pose no risk.
Several more results are expected in the coming months, said Gary
Bernstein of the University of Pennsylvania, project scientist for the
Dark Energy Survey.
The Dark Energy Camera was built and tested at Fermilab. The camera
can see light from more than 100,000 galaxies up to 8 billion
light-years away in each crystal-clear digital snapshot.
“The Dark Energy Camera has
proven to be a tremendous tool, not only for the Dark Energy Survey, but
also for other important observations conducted year-round,” said Tom
Diehl of Fermilab, operations scientist for the Dark Energy Survey. “The
data collected during the survey’s first year — and its next four —
will greatly improve our understanding of the way our universe works.”
The
Dark Energy Survey Collaboration comprises more than 300 researchers
from 25 institutions in six countries. For more information, visit http://www.darkenergysurvey.org.
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