Cosmic images from the world's largest digital camera are so big they require a 'data butler'

The Rubin Observatory's enormous datasets call for cloud computing, seven different "brokers" and, indeed, a butler of sorts.

The night sky dazzles above Rubin Observatory in this image in Cerro Pachon, Chile on June 08, 2025.
(Image credit: OBSERVATORIO VERA C. RUBIN/ HANDOUT/Anadolu via Getty Images)

The amount of data that will be collected by the Vera C. Rubin Observatory, which released its fabulous first-light images this week, will far outweigh what any telescope before it managed to deliver. This has led astronomers to take a step into cloud computing — as well as enlist the help of seven brokers and a data butler.

Once it is fully up and running, the Rubin Observatory (funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation–Department of Energy) will be collecting 20 terabytes of data each night. Analyzing this data, it will issue 10 million alerts to astronomers, all of which will be managed by what are known as "brokers" that filter the huge number of alerts into something more manageable.

Astrobiology Magazine