[meteorite-list] Stardust_at_Home Update - June 12, 2006
From: Ron Baalke <baalke_at_meteoritecentral.com>
Date: Fri Jun 16 19:07:03 2006 Message-ID: <200606162304.QAA24869_at_zagami.jpl.nasa.gov> http://www.planetary.org/programs/projects/stardustathome/update_061206.html Stardust_at_home Update: Scanning, Testing, and Calibration Movies Amir Alexander The Planetary Society June 12 , 2006: Following a slow start, the scanning of the Stardust aerogel is proceeding smoothly at the Johnson Space Center (JSC). Eight out of the 130 aerogel tiles have already been scanned, and four additional tiles are now scanned every week. At this rate, scanning the entire surface of the aerogel collector should take about 30 weeks. According to the original plan, 1.6 million "movies" would have been needed to scan the entire surface of the aerogel collector. In practice, however, the CCD camera taking the pictures of the aerogel at the Stardust_at_home lab at JSC is larger than the one initially planned for the job and takes pictures of larger aerogel segments. This means that it now takes about 5,500 movies to cover each aerogel tile, and the total number of movies needed to cover the entire collector is just over 700,000. Back in Berkeley, Andrew Westphal and his team have been picking out sample movies and checking them for quality and focus. It took a while to get it right, and several segments of the aerogel had to be scanned multiple times, but the problems now seem resolved. The samples are now consistently good, and the scanning is proceeding with little delay. In addition, the Stardust_at_home crew has been hard at work producing "calibration movies." These look for all intents and purposes like real Stardust_at_home movies, containing the telltale signs of an interstellar dust particle track. In fact, the calibration movies are artificially produced by combining real Stardust_at_home movies with track images taken from aerogel bombarded with particles at an accelerator in Germany. These calibration movies will be interspersed among the "real" Stardust_at_home movies that will be sent out to users around the world. By tracking whether any individual user detects or ignores the tracks in the planted movies, the Stardust_at_home team will get a pretty good idea of the user's level of skill or - just as likely - whether he or she is paying attention! Only results from users with a proven track record will be considered in pinpointing the location of real interstellar dust particles. As of now, the Stardust_at_home has not committed to a launch date for the project. Past experience has taught them that unforeseen difficulties might pop up at any time. "That's how it is with research" Andrew Westphal says philosophically. But with each difficulty laid to rest and each hurdle surmounted, the day is fast approaching when Stardust_at_home will go live. Stay Tuned! Received on Fri 16 Jun 2006 07:04:45 PM PDT |
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