The infrared camera and spectograph.
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Subaru can view
not only visible light but other forms of light, too. It carries
seven devices that allow it to do things like split the light
from stars and see the invisible infrared rays that are emitted
by all heavenly bodies. Subaru is so powerful that it could see
a ping pong ball on the top of Mt. Fuji from Tokyo, 100 kilometers
(62.5 miles) away. It can even see previously unknown galaxy clusters
5 billion light years from earth - an unbelievable distance! (One
light year is the distance light travels in one year, about 9.5
trillion kilometers or 5.9 trillion miles.)
The universe
was born in the Big Bang, which took place between 10 and 20 billion
years ago, and it is still expanding. Faraway objects that were
formed when the universe was young are moving away from us with
speeds proportional to their distance. Subaru demonstrates its
power by picking up infrared light rays from these distant objects.
The cloud of gas surrounding the galaxy that the Subaru discovered.
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Subaru has already
been able to discover a huge cloud of hydrogen gas that is about
115 light years across and is expanding around a galaxy, and it has also
succeeded in determining what galaxies looked like soon after
the universe was formed. In May 2001 it was announced that Subaru
had succeeded in detecting 95% of all the light in the universe
emitted by galaxies. This showed that there may be as-yet-unknown
sources of light in the universe. The Subaru telescope continues
to make discoveries that help us to understand how the universe
is made up.
Photos: National Astronomical Observatory of Japan
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