The world’s most powerful digital eye is open — and it can see everything. On Tuesday, Feb. 24, 2026, when the Vera C. Rubin Observatory — a wide-field telescope in Chile fitted with the world’s largest digital camera — detected 800,000 cosmic changes in a single night. The milestone marked the launch of its near-real-time alert system — a powerful engine designed to flag everything from exploding stars to fast-moving asteroids within two minutes of observation.
Next: Seven Million Alerts
The $473 million Rubin Observatory — jointly funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and the Department of Energy’s Office of Science — is atop Cerro Pachón in Chile at 8,900 feet (2,700 meters). It’s expected to eventually generate as many as seven million alerts per night, creating an unprecedented stream of live astronomical discoveries.
“By connecting scientists to a vast and continuous stream of information, NSF–DOE Rubin Observatory will make it possible to follow the Universe’s events as they unfold, from the explosive to the most faint and fleeting,” said Luca Rizzi, a program director for research infrastructure at NSF.
A 10-Year Movie Of The Universe
Formerly known as the Large Synoptic Survey Telescope, the observatory will soon begin its decade-long Legacy Survey of Space and Time (LSST). Its mission is to create a detailed time-lapse of the Southern Hemisphere sky by imaging it entirely every three to four nights for 10 years.
At the heart of the project is the Simonyi Survey Telescope. An 8.4-meter (27.6-foot) primary mirror with a field of view about as wide as seven full moons, it’s designed for sweeping, repeated sky surveys — effectively producing a high-resolution astronomical movie rather than close-ups.
In its first year alone, the observatory is expected to capture more images of the universe than all previous optical observatories combined.
Largest Digital Camera Ever Built
Powering the mission is the 3,200-megapixel LSST Camera — the largest digital camera ever constructed for astronomy. The instrument contains 189 individual 16-megapixel sensors arranged across a 2-foot-wide focal plane and uses six massive optical filters to observe the universe in different wavelengths of light.
Every 39 to 40 seconds, the telescope slews to a new position in just five seconds and captures another enormous image. Critical to the alert system are fiber-optic cables that transmit the data to a supercomputing facility in California, where software compares each new image with a reference template, instantly identifying anything that has changed — whether a brightening star, a supernova flare or an asteroid appearing.
Those changes generate global alerts, enabling scientists to conduct time-sensitive follow-up observations with other ground- and space-based telescopes.
Asteroids To Dark Matter
The Rubin Observatory comes with huge expectations. In the short term, it’s expected to detect about 90% of potentially hazardous asteroids larger than 140 meters that could approach Earth within seven million kilometers. It will also likely find more interstellar comets (such as 3I/ATLAS), rogue planets, variable stars and millions of supernovae. The enormous dataset will also map billions of galaxies, helping scientists probe the nature of dark matter — first discovered by astronomer Vera Rubin, for whom it’s named.
“Enabling real-time discovery on 10 terabytes of images nightly has required years of technical innovation in image processing algorithms, databases, and data orchestration,” said Eric Bellm, Alert Production Pipeline Group Lead for Rubin Data Management from NSF NOIRLab and the University of Washington. “We can’t wait to see the exciting science that comes from these data.”
Wishing you clear skies and wide eyes.











