Indian scientists discovers hidden unknown stars in lockdown pollution free clear sky | climate change on Covid19


The sky is ten percent darker than before. At the same time, 5 percent of all stars have been bright. As a result, new guests appear to be empty-eyed in some cases, said a team of Bengali scientists at ICSP.                      



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The shining night brought back memories of the starry sky. From a polluted world, it is now possible to see pigs, that is, the planet Venus. In the Corona situation, people are locked up. In such a staggering environment, a group of Bengali scientists kept their eyes on the telescope. They found the stars in the jump. Far away from the stars, the magnitude of the pollution on it, so scientists could never find the stars.

The earth was covered with a sheet of pollution. Environmentalists say the coroner's weather has largely removed that sheet. As a result, only a group of stars were captured on a 20-inch lens telescope. Bengali researchers at the Indian Center for Space Physics (ICSP) in Kolkata are now busy finding the right group of unknown stars.Image captured on telescope before lockdown. Photo Courtesy: Indian Center for Space Physics (ICSP)
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After lockdown
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     Before lockdown          
Sandeep Babu added, "The telescope also has its own measurement. They can be seen when a certain quality photon arrives at the telescope. But if it becomes less than that, the light of that star will not be found. ' The stars were not catching on the telescope due to the pollution for so long. As a result, the Bengali researchers had no idea of ​​their existence. He said that three of his students, Ashim Sarkar, Shyam Sarkar and Pabitra Shil watched through the telescope, so long as a star could have been found 10 million light years away, in the case of Corona 200 million light years away stars also visible in the lockdown sky. That is, the stars are twice as visible now.Image of lockdown period. Photo Courtesy: Indian Center for Space Physics (ICSP)
The sky is ten percent darker than before. At the same time, 5 percent of all stars have been bright. As a result, new guests appear to be empty-eyed in some cases, said a team of Bengali scientists at ICSP.  
 

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