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Astronomy Picture of the Day
Discover the cosmos!
Each day a different image or photograph of our fascinating universe is featured, along with a brief explanation written by a professional astronomer.
2019/01/08
HESS Telescopes Explore the High-Energy Sky
Image credits:
Vikas Chander
,
H.E.S.S. Collaboration
;
Music:
Emotive Piano by
Immersive Music
Explanation:
They may look like modern mechanical dinosaurs but they are enormous swiveling eyes that watch the sky. The
High Energy Stereoscopic System (H.E.S.S.) Observatory
is composed of four 12-meter reflecting-mirror telescopes surrounding a
larger telescope
housing a 28-meter mirror. They are designed to detect strange flickers of blue light --
Cherenkov radiation
--emitted when
charged particles
move slightly faster than the
speed of light
in air. This light is emitted when a
gamma ray
from a distant source strikes a molecule in Earth's atmosphere and starts a
charged-particle shower
.
H.E.S.S.
is sensitive to some of the highest energy photons (
TeV
) crossing the universe. Operating since 2003 in
Namibia
, H.E.S.S. has searched for
dark matter
and has
discovered over 50 sources
emitting high energy radiation including
supernova remnants
and the
centers of galaxies
that contain supermassive
black holes
. Pictured last September, H.E.S.S. telescopes swivel and stare in
time-lapse sequences
shot in front of our
Milky Way Galaxy
and the
Magellanic Clouds
-- as the occasional Earth-orbiting satellite zips by.
Authors & editors:
Robert J. nemiroff
(MTU)
&
Jerry T. Bonnell
(UMCP)
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NASA Official:
Phillip Newman
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at
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