Approximately 90 years from eyeballing:Roland wrote:
What is the period of revolution for the stars in the center of the disk?
http://asterisk.apod.com/viewtopic.php? ... 39#p208813
Approximately 90 years from eyeballing:Roland wrote:
What is the period of revolution for the stars in the center of the disk?
Second one out of the park, then. Word for word identical, just re-processed picture. (well, not "just", but you see what I mean)ta152h0 wrote:caramba, I am speechless. The big pooobahs at APOD hit one out of the park. Time for an ice cold one to stop the vibrations
The STIS instrument has a fancy sort of "filter wheel" called the mode selection device. It consists of a large number of gratings optimized for specific modes, as well as a prism and a simple mirror. The particular mode selecting element used for an image is identified in the FITS header as the optical element. MIRVIS means the mirror was used- that is, a direct image was made, not a spectroscopic image using one of the gratings.DavidLeodis wrote:In the image description in Judy Schmidt's 'Geckzilla' website it mentions STIS/MIRVIS data. I have found that STIS is the Space Telescope Imaging Spectrograph on the Hubble Space Telescope but, despite lots of searching, I have not been able to find what MIRVIS stands for. It is not even defined in the Hubble Legacy Archive glossary section! I guess the IRVIS part may be InfraRed VISual.
The 2002 APOD actually an image which uses data from 1997. That's 5 years prior to this APOD's data. It's the same object but by no means identical. There are striking differences. Sept. 15th's APOD is also twice as detailed in resolution.Rick wrote:Second one out of the park, then. Word for word identical, just re-processed picture. (well, not "just", but you see what I mean)ta152h0 wrote:caramba, I am speechless. The big pooobahs at APOD hit one out of the park. Time for an ice cold one to stop the vibrations
Thanks for that explanation, Chris. I thought it might be something like that. I have been wondering if it's filtered light or not. I get the impression that it's either unfiltered or minimally filtered. I was trying to explain it to some of the commenters over at the reddit post for the image.Chris Peterson wrote:The STIS instrument has a fancy sort of "filter wheel" called the mode selection device. It consists of a large number of gratings optimized for specific modes, as well as a prism and a simple mirror. The particular mode selecting element used for an image is identified in the FITS header as the optical element. MIRVIS means the mirror was used- that is, a direct image was made, not a spectroscopic image using one of the gratings.
Deborah Kenny wrote:Hi,
MIRVIS is a filter combination for the STIS - Mirror plus Visible.
There are two different settings. One gives 3050 - 5550 and
the other 5550 - 10,000 Angstroms.
Hope this helps!
I meant identical wording. And it's the same Hubble picture, with more processing. Great work on the picture, a bit lazy on the text.geckzilla wrote:The 2002 APOD actually an image which uses data from 1997. That's 5 years prior to this APOD's data. It's the same object but by no means identical. There are striking differences. Sept. 15th's APOD is also twice as detailed in resolution.Rick wrote:Second one out of the park, then. Word for word identical, just re-processed picture. (well, not "just", but you see what I mean)ta152h0 wrote:caramba, I am speechless. The big pooobahs at APOD hit one out of the park. Time for an ice cold one to stop the vibrations
It's not the same Hubble picture with more processing. It's an entirely different picture with different processing of the same object.Rick wrote:I meant identical wording. And it's the same Hubble picture, with more processing. Great work on the picture, a bit lazy on the text.