SCIENCE
A powerful new telescope in Chile is about to change how we see our solar system forever.
By Aniket Chakraborty
June 4, 2025
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The
Vera C. Rubin Observatory
is expected to discover over 5 million new asteroids.
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Driving this discovery is Sorcha—an open-source simulation tool named after the Gaelic word for brightness.
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Sorcha uses the observatory’s planned schedule to predict unseen solar system objects.
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It forecasts a 4 to 9 times increase in known small bodies like asteroids and Trojans.
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Near-Earth objects, Jupiter Trojans, and distant Centaurs will all be tracked in detail.
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Scientists say this data will upgrade textbooks and sharpen asteroid impact defense systems.
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Rubin’s Simonyi Telescope captures each object in color, unlike older, single-filter surveys.
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The first stunning images from the campaign will be unveiled on June 23.
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With Sorcha and Rubin, Earth’s planetary neighborhood is about to get vividly clearer.
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