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	Q&A: Chandra Mission
                        
                    
            Q:
               Why don't you have more public pictures available? I am assuming
               that hundreds of black hole candidates, quasars, the core of our
               own galaxy, pulsars, neutron stars, supernovas, etc...have been
               imaged already and not released.
                
               A:
               The images are coming. However, they don't just come down from
               the telescope in their full glory, and there are not thousands
               of them. Only a few, actually. They come down as a data stream,
               which is converted to an event file, which includes all sorts of
               information that is mixed together. To get an image, the
               scientists first have to figure out where the telescope was
               actually pointing, since it moves around during the observation.
               This is done by tracking fiducial lights on the spacecraft and
               the positions of well-known stars. The spacecraft motion is then
               taken out using a computer program. Then the background noise
               due to the detectors, cosmic rays and the diffuse X-ray
               background must be subtracted out. Finally, the scientists
               select the energy band they want to look at to get the
               information they want, and then the images have to be put in a
               form for publication on the web. During the approximately three
               and a half weeks that we have been calibrating Chandra, only
               about a couple dozen sources have been observed. Most of these
               observations have been out of focus, and off the axis of the
               telescope to test the instruments and the mirror, so they don't
               make good images. Some of the others are point-like, so they are
               not too interesting. However, there are several beautiful images
               that haven't been made public yet, and be assured, we are
               working hard to get them out as soon as possible.
               
               
                
               
              
   
        



