A season - for distance and perspective

December 03, 2025

At this time of year, when daylight shortens and the horizon retreats into early dusk, we’re reminded how often progress begins with the willingness to look beyond what is immediately in front of us. The story of the telescope is rooted in that impulse — the desire to make the distant understandable, to bring faraway worlds within the reach of human thought.

A century ago, Earl C. Slipher stood beneath a cold desert sky at Lowell Observatory and directed a massive refractor toward Mars. Working with fragile glass plates and equipment that strained against the limits of its era, he fought atmospheric distortion, long exposures, and the patient uncertainty of early astronomical photography. Yet, despite these constraints, he produced something extraordinary - high quality photography that could extend human perception over millions of kilometers.

Today, we follow that same logic, though our gaze is no longer cast into the heavens. Instead of distant planets, we examine the internal landscapes of advanced electronics. When an X-ray beam from the FYNE NF4 passes through a C4 solder bump on a graphics processing unit (GPU), it highlights defects in the manufacturing process that can cause critical failures during device operation. The resulting image echoes the astronomy of Slipher’s era: clusters of bright spheres, isolated voids, and silent orbits frozen within a grainy universe of matter.

What Slipher once traced across celestial bodies, we now uncover inside matter itself: voids appearing like small planets, defects drifting like moons, and hidden structures emerging with a clarity impossible through conventional sight.

The telescope allowed us to reach outward. X-ray imaging allows us to reach inward. Both transform distance, whether cosmic or microscopic, into understanding.

Warm wishes for the season. 

Best regards, 
Comet X-ray

Earl C. Slipher
A 2D slice of voids in C4-bumps viewed with 3D X-ray. The bumps are 100 microns in diameter and voids range between a few and tens of microns.
Plate XLVII: Photo evidence of supposed lines (canals) on Mars Earl C. Slipher The Photographic Story of Mars Cambridge, Mass., Sky Pub. Corp., 1962.

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