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WISE Eyes...
This frame shows the progress of the WISE All-Sky Survey at the present time. WISE, or NASA's Wide-field InfraRed Survey Explorer, is perched up in the sky like a wise, old owl, scanning the whole sky one-and-a-half times in IR Light. On July 17, 2010, it will have completed its first scan of the entire sky, delivering more than one million image frames so far.

This map is filled in to show the sky areas that WISE scanned over time. Red indicates regions with the greatest coverage, and blue the least. The Poles received the most coverage because WISE orbits Earth around the Poles, scanning out strips of sky as Earth moves around the Sun. The red lines between the Poles show areas that received extra coverage because of the mission's strategy to avoid the Moon. 
When the moon is in WISE's field of view, about twice every month, the space telescope captures the region it blocks, by first moving ahead of the moon and then behind it. This results in overlapped coverage for certain slices of sky. During this first all-sky scan, every point was covered by at least eight image frames.

The Infrared Astronomical Satellite was a joint project of the United States, United Kingdom and the Netherlands. 
The Two-Micron All-Sky Survey was a project of NASA; the National Science Foundation; the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California.
Parole chiave: ALL-Sky Survey

WISE Eyes...

This frame shows the progress of the WISE All-Sky Survey at the present time. WISE, or NASA's Wide-field InfraRed Survey Explorer, is perched up in the sky like a wise, old owl, scanning the whole sky one-and-a-half times in IR Light. On July 17, 2010, it will have completed its first scan of the entire sky, delivering more than one million image frames so far.

This map is filled in to show the sky areas that WISE scanned over time. Red indicates regions with the greatest coverage, and blue the least. The Poles received the most coverage because WISE orbits Earth around the Poles, scanning out strips of sky as Earth moves around the Sun. The red lines between the Poles show areas that received extra coverage because of the mission's strategy to avoid the Moon.
When the moon is in WISE's field of view, about twice every month, the space telescope captures the region it blocks, by first moving ahead of the moon and then behind it. This results in overlapped coverage for certain slices of sky. During this first all-sky scan, every point was covered by at least eight image frames.

The Infrared Astronomical Satellite was a joint project of the United States, United Kingdom and the Netherlands.
The Two-Micron All-Sky Survey was a project of NASA; the National Science Foundation; the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and the California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California.

M 84.jpg Rho_Ophiuci-PIA10181.jpg Asteroid-PIA11735.jpg M 55.jpg M 42 - HST-1.jpg
Informazioni sul file
Nome del file:PIA13120.jpg
Nome album:MareKromium / The Universe in Super Definition
Valutazione (3 voti):55555(Mostra dettagli)
Parole chiave:ALL-Sky / Survey
Copyright:NASA/JPL-Caltech/UCLA
Dimensione del file:119 KiB
Data di inserimento:Ago 02, 2010
Dimensioni:1191 x 717 pixels
Visualizzato:62 volte
URL:https://www.lunexit.it/gallery/displayimage.php?pid=27236
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