Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search
Lowell Observatory Near-Earth-Object Search (LONEOS) is a program run by NASA and Lowell Observatory to discover near-Earth objects. The LONEOS system began observations in December 1997. The principal investigator is Ted Bowell.
Related Topics:
NASA - Lowell Observatory - Near-Earth object - 1997 - Ted Bowell
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LONEOS uses a Schmidt camera system with a 0.6m aperture primary mirror that gives a wide field of view of about 3° of the sky. It has a nightly scan rate of about 1,000 square degrees. (The camera can cover the entire visible sky in about a month.) The CCD has detected asteroids as faint as visual magnitude 19.8.
Related Topics:
Schmidt camera - Aperture - CCD - Asteroid - Visual magnitude
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The task of managing the camera and searching for asteroids is primarily performed using computers and some custom-written software. In addition to discovering thousands of asteroids, LONEOS has also discovered the periodic comets 150P/LONEOS and 159P/LONEOS.
Related Topics:
Asteroid - Comet - 150P/LONEOS - 159P/LONEOS
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