
Last week, a sneak peek of the first batch of heavy area images from the new Vera C. Rubin Observatory in Chile was published on news websites and social media platforms, followed by a livestream event.
The Rubin Observatory is going to create the best time-lapse video of all time, according to a blog from the station.
The project is being funded by the National Science Foundation and the Office of Science of the US Department of Energy, and the station is named after the British scientist who is widely credited with finding some of the first pieces of black issue.  ,
Next week, the scientists and Board authorities from the NSF and Client held a press conference and Q&A about the findings. The stream above is available to watch.
Thousands of stars and large photos
The video provided some perspective regarding the files being captured at the Rubin Observatory and why, despite a few technical problems.
Our understanding of dark matter, dark energy, and celestial security will increase perhaps faster than ever before, according to Brian Stone, the NSF’s chief of staff.
A full-sky check of the observatory is performed every three to four days using the observatory’s 3, 200-megapixel lens. The centre shares only a small portion of the captured photographs, some of which only show 2 % of the full view, which may require 400 HDTVs.  ,
10 million stars may be captured in one photo. Astronomers have discovered 1 million asteroids in our solar system closer to Earth, and they anticipate discovering 5 million more over the coming decades.