Omnipresent Astronomy
Omnipresent Astronomy
Jan 29 The recent pass of Comet Holmes and today's close approach of Asteroid 2007 TU24 (shown below, image from space.com) have gotten me thinking again about open source astronomy. I have always been fascinated by the internet and how modern networking technologies bring things into one big mesh, and astronomy fits right into this. All we have to do is synchronise our watches. Let's say I have a telescope with a computer attached to it. This telescope always knows exactly where it is pointing in the sky and exactly what time it is. Finally this telescope knows where it is on the Earth in terms of latitude and longitude. Now let's connect this telescope to the internet and constantly feed the images it produces to a server.

Well put Rob. For the past two years I’ve been trying to think of a nice project which would benefit from simultaneous (or close in time) images from a wide range of longitudes and latitudes. The Moon is an obvious nearby target so would be the easiest to exploit from a parallax point of view. I still haven’t thought of anything either scientific that this many view-points would give that can’t already be done by existing instruments.
The upcoming lunar eclipse might look interesting in 3D.
Hmm… a scientific use for this concept? Last year I gave a talk titled ‘Astronomy 2.0′. It concerned all sorts of things like Google Sky, Galaxy Zoo and your RSS telescope feeds. Someone asked me what we could use this all for and I said ‘I don’t care, really’. Which elicited a laugh from the audience.
I was confused by that because I think these things don’t have to have a purpose. Quite often one will emerge naturally from the process anyway. They call it blue-sky thinking in corporate circles, but I think black-sky thinking may make more sense for us.
Sounds interesting. A bit like google earth