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Well, this camera, this camera has been tested extensively and what it would attach to the Verice Rubin Observatory. And it is now, again, in the sky as part of the Legacy Survey in Space Time, the LFFT. Nightly, over the next decade, the Rubin will point the 3,200 megapixel camera towards the southern sky, taking pictures every three to four seconds. And these will be pitched together to produce a time-lapse record. And the LFFT was designed to look at everything, including things scientists are not even actually looking for. So they're just looking to pick up a whole bunch of things and start analyzing what they were able to photograph and they're hoping to find some new things. And the data will be used to see stars, supernova galaxies, and a period of other things in the state. Hopefully, it will let us discover more clues about dark matter and even dark energy that's dropping.
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