blink microscope

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(′bliŋk kəm′par·əd·ər)

(optics) An optical instrument used to alternately view two pictures in the same visual field in rapid succession, to detect small differences in similar images.


blink microscope, in astronomy, device for determining a change in position or magnitude (brightness) of a star relative to other stars in the background. Two photographs of the same field or area of the sky are projected so that they precisely coincide. The combined image is viewed through a magnifying eyepiece while light from first one photograph and then the other is interrupted mechanically. A change in position or magnitude of a star can usually be detected since the star will seem to flicker or jump to and fro while the background stars remain steady in both position and brightness.


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Blink comparator

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This blink comparator at Lowell Observatory was used in the discovery of Pluto.

A blink comparator was a viewing apparatus used by astronomers to find differences between two photographs of the night sky shot using optical telescopes such as astrographs. It permitted rapidly switching from viewing one photograph to viewing the other, "blinking" back and forth between the two taken of the same area of the sky at different times. This allowed the user to more easily spot objects in the night sky that changed position. It was also sometimes known as a blink microscope.

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Applications

In photographs taken a few days apart, rapidly moving objects such as asteroids and comets would stand out, because they would appear to be jumping back and forth between two positions, while all the other fixed stars stood still. Photographs taken at longer intervals could be used to detect stars with large proper motion, or variable stars, or to distinguish binary stars from optical doubles.

The most notable body to be found using this technique was Pluto, discovered by Clyde Tombaugh in 1930.

The Projection Blink Comparator (PROBLICOM), invented by amateur astronomer Ben Mayer, was a low-cost version of the professional tool. It consisted of two slide projectors with a rotating occulting disk that alternately blocked the images from the projectors. This tool allowed amateur astronomers to contribute to some phases of serious research.

In modern times, CCDs have largely replaced photographic plates and astronomical images are stored digitally on computer. The blinking technique can easily be performed on a computer screen rather than with a physical blink comparator apparatus as before.[1]

Modern replacements

However, the blinking technique is less used than before because image differencing algorithms are often used to detect moving objects more effectively than human eyes are capable of. Or, to measure the precise position of a known object whose direction and rate of motion are known, a "track and stack" technique is used in which multiple images are superimposed by software in such a way that the moving object is fixed in place; the moving object then stands out as a dot among the star trails. This is particularly effective in cases where the moving object is very faint and superimposing multiple images of it permits it to be seen better.

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References



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Clyde William Tombaugh (American astronomer)
Pluto (in astronomy)
Year 1926 (in Science & Technology)