The Billion-Dollar Telescope
dcmeserve writes "As in all science, astronomers are ever searching for better technology to aid in their task. But when it comes to telescopes, nothing beats sheer bulk of light-gathering capability. This article gives a brief overview of the top contenders for the next leap forward, including
a 100-meter behemoth that is expected to run $1 billion."
...to pay your $699 licensing fee you cock-smoking teabaggers.
Just kidding, you all blow. All hail FTM!
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All about trolling
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A paper on the $1b telescope (called the Effelsberg telescope, after a 18th century astronomer) can be acquired here. Also the HTML version is here if you don't want to bother downloading the PDF or if you don't have a reader.
I'd paste the whole text here, but it's too long.
Speaking of using telescopes, and the issues you have to face.
It looks like the UK government is about to propose legislation that would combat light pollution. This would be great for all UK astronomers, especially those of us that live in urban areas.
When I was an undergraduate at University College London, we had to trek up tok to the university's observatory at Mill Hill (as featured in the Omen movies), to do our Practical Astronomy classes and to use the telescopes. Previously though, although how far back in time I'm not certain, the classes were taught using two telescopes housed in domes in the university's front quad, which is practically in the middle of London.
The difference in light pollution between the two sites is amazing. Making observations of Delta Cephi (as required for one assignment, to calculate it's period) was impossible from central London but acheivable even with the naked eye at Mill Hill. Even so, the light pollution there (Mill Hill being a part of London, albeit one that's a few miles out from the centre) was still appreciable.
It would be nice to see the stars from London again, to be able to pick out more than just a few constellations. However, I don't expect the situation to improve any time soon, if at all. I have a sneaky suspicion that the legislation will be more concerned about people who leave their garden lights shining brightly into their neighbours properties than anything else.
Karma karma karma karma karma chameleon, you come and go, you come and go.
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slashdot used to link to a movie review site that i loved to read. i've forgotten it's name but someone here must know what it is. all google attempts fail. shame on me.
The newer models should be capable of frying at least 2.4x10^15 ants/second, compared to Hubble's 1.8x10^13 ants.
Spend the $1 billion on better things. We should try and solve our own planets problems before going out into space.
At least the money isn't being wasted in creating Weapons of Mass Destruction.
As in all science, astronomers are ever searching for better technology to aid in their task.
This sentence doesn't make any sense but what I think you are trying to say is that all scientists want better technology. Pure mathematicians and theoretical physicists are two groups of scientists that don't rely on technology to aid them in their tasks. Please don't generalize. Some of us don't rely on gadgets to do our work for us.
I managed to snag an image before the whole server got slashbotted: http://212.229.115.84/tripod/images/hubblespacetel escope.gif. Sorry for the small size.
The NASA plan calls for a Hubble servicing mission in 2006, possibly followed by another one a few years later, that could keep the Hubble in space far beyond even the launch of the new James Webb Space Telescope in 2011.
But after the crash of the space shuttle Columbia in February, the shuttle program has come to a grinding halt. Without servicing by the space shuttle, the Hubble is living on borrowed time.
See more here.
only informative comment in this article at this time
Here is the NYTimes Google Affiliate link, for those who don't want to register.
No need for the karma, I'm just glad I can help the Slashdot community!
Karma karma karma karma karma chameleon, you come and go, you come and go.
The bottom line with telescopes is that anything on the ground has to look through a ton of crap in the atmosphere and battle light pollution. Much smaller telescopes in space will work a lot better. ISS should have a giant telescope mounted on it. It's a shame Hubble is our only orbiting telescope.
The global economy is a great thing until you feel it locally.
Big science is a waste of money. A billion dollars for a telescope! The amount of money being pissed away by these people is simply incredible. And just to look at some gases and crap.
Heck, the government could buy almost half of a B2 bomber for that kind of cash!
He is doing us Slashdot usera a great service by mirroring these pages. Honour him.
Please, mod him up.
The answer is, using these big telescopes, we can look back in time. Light travels at a set speed in a vacuum: approximately 186,000 miles per second. The universe is so large, however, that light (and other forms of energy such as x-rays and radio waves) that was generated a bit after the creation of the universe in the big bang is just reaching us! Now, we see (and so do optical telescopes) by filtering light generated by or bouncing off of objects. So, by looking out, as far as we can, we can literally look back in time to the creation of all that is. And that, my geeky friends, is why we need giant telescopes.
Happy Stardust/Mars days :)
this storIE may never be tolled accurately?
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.asp on that won?
planet/population rescue, gnu millennium edition? (Score:-1, Offtopic)
by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 31, @12:08PM (#7846083)
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by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 31, @06:48AM (#7844071)
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by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday December 31, @06:44AM (#7844061)
skew/FUDge survey results/EVERYTHING?
you can bet your
&, failing that, we have the:
pateNTdead eyecon0meter used to
by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday December 30, @02:38PM (#7837849)
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morons build vessel that floats on any suBStance? (mynuts won, no need to be suspicious?)
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* mynuts won, stuff that really matters is...? by Anonymous Coward (Score:-1) Wednesday December 31, @12:14PM
I'm holding out for a telescope at 550 A.U.'s, the gravitational focus of the sun.
This quote was attributed to R.A. Janek, and is the sentence that graces the page just before the beginning of Michael Crichton's novel "The Andromeda Strain". It would be most beneficial to science to see if we can use all of our technology to reduce the cost, even if only a little bit, from its(pardon the pun) astronomical level.
If you're going to spend a $1B on a telescope, aren't you reaching the point where the money would be better spent to put one in space away from the atmosphere and associated debris rather than sticking it on terra firma?
-S
--- What parts of "shall make no law", "shall not be infringed", and "shall not be violated" don't you understand?
In fact, it's "The Billion-Euros Telescope" which means about 20% more.
____
nico
Nico-Live
Necessity may be the mother of invention, but when you've got a lean budget you innovate.
BTW, there's this interesting other stuff in the news about Aussies seaching the heavens for likely places to host another earth.
Obligatory filching of Galaxy Song lyrics: So remember, when you're feeling very small and insecure,
how amazingly unlikely is your birth,
Pray that there's intelligent life somewhere up in space,
because there's bugger all down here on Earth.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
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a;lsd
It's a paper which has lots of important budget information, dimensions and even a few drawings in two-point perspective of potential designs.
Although they both focus, they are not giant magnifying glasses.
If the old ones will end up on Ebay? I could sure use one that could see through curtains....
From excellent karma to terible karma with a single +5 funny post...
too bad, no mod points for you.
Why are people pouring more money into massive terrestrial telescopes when orbital hubble-like telescopes seem to be inherently superior? (or are they?)
Even better, as it's almost $1.26 to the Euro... that's $1,260,000,000!
You've been asked to stop, we modbomb you down, and you come back for more. Bitch, IT'S ON.
The parent poster is the newest account created by the infamous Sir Haxalot/Pingular/Steve 'Rim' Jobs/Aens. How do I know? He posts in the EXACT SAME STYLE as these other accounts. He PLAGARIZES popular posts from previous discussions and claims them as his own in a pathetic attempt to gain karma bonuses. Well, Mr. SlashdotCEO, you ain't foolin' me. A quick Google search reveals that this IDENTICAL POST was posted previously in a discussion from October. Your posts are copied and unoriginal, no one likes you, you are continually modbombed into oblivion, yet to seem to come back for more. GO AWAY. WE HATE YOU. PLEASE DIE.
Moderators, do your thing. The parent post is PLAGARIZED, COPIED from a similiar discussion. Mod this shitbrick as Overrated or, if you feel gutsy against the M2, mark it as Troll. Please remeber, he is SlashdotCEO, an unorignal lamer. Mod all future posts down and see if we can't convine this prepubescent troll to grow up.
Hey hubbles lens is(or at least was a month or so ago) the smoothest man made object. We're talking about polishing a lense so that the surface bumps are smaller than transistors, and the shape is near perfect over a 10 meter or 30 meter diameter. That is where a lot of the money will go. Also, throw in a few physicists at about 80k a year, a IT guy, 60k a year, a janitor, a tour guide, a few technitians salarys for 20 years. Not to mention if something big goes wrong, your going to have to fly in experts to Chile or where ever. They aren't going to want to drop what there doing unless you pay them really well. An atomic force microscope can image at the atomic scale. It is made from a rod and a piezoelectric crystal(the same type of stuff that's in a barbeue starter). The price tag on those is about 1M, I know a lab with 3 of these guys. To get a top notch small scale lab going your looking at 1-10M. The data from the telescope will be used by hundreds of researchers.
Light emanating from earth really does'nt die out, right? So if it was possible for us to either travel faster than light or warp space time into a circle and then get a powerful enough telescope, then we should be able to see events from the past, right?
That is travel faster than light, to a long distance, turn around and then look at earth with a powerful telescope, we should be able to see kennedy getting shot? wouldnt we? Or maybe bend spacetime so that all the light which left earth years ago comes back to earth ?
Why are you trolls attacking insightful posts? Do you not have a life?
The thing is, you get much more hardware for your buck on earth, since you don't have to pay x number of dollars to bring it into orbit. there are also other limitations with a space telescope - the largest bit you can put into orbit at one time, need for consumables (e.g. thruster fuel) that are hard to replenish, difficulty of maintenance/upgrades, cosmic rays etc.
active optics are already at a point of maturity that earth-based resolution is nearing that of the Hubble. by the time these monsters are being built, that technology will be even more mature.
this leaves only a few advantages for a space telescope. one is observations at wavelengths to which the atmosphere is opaque - i think these are x-ray, UV etc. (maybe IR?). with these, you basically have to build in space. the next generation space telescope i think is optimized for the IR. the success of Chandra is an example of the importance of space telescopes.
the other advantage of a space telescope might be that i can observe the whole sky, which earth bound telescopes cannot. i just don't know how feasible it is (e.g. cost in fuel spent) for major changes in orbit, to cover the whole sky. but maybe this is not a problem, i don't know.
Do not mod the parent post up! He is a troll known for posting duplicate comments in a effort to achieve greater karma. He brings nothing to this discussion. Other accounts used by this same troll are Sir Haxalot, Pingular, Steve 'Rim' Jobs, and Aens.
Please moderate him as Overrated to avoid any penalities incurred by clueless meta-moderations. This post has been brought to you by a concerned Slashdot reader who wants to keep the quality of the posts on here at their highest, including the creative trolls. Reposting comments, however, has got to go.
FP45 you tea-cocking bag smoker.
Not really. With the rise of adaptive optics, ground-based telescopes are increasingly able to achieve diffration-limited or near-diffraction-limited resolution in the optical and (in particular) the near-IR (which is of crucial importance for cosmology -- the current "Hot" area of astronomy).
Once you hit that physics-limited level of resolution (which has been the true advantage of HST), the gains come from light-gathering ability. This is where ground-based telescopes clean up. The $$/area is much lower (i.e. better) for ground-based telescopes. And the upkeep costs are much smaller as well. Space is expensive.
When you can have a telescope with near-diffraction limited resolution and 10-1000 times the light gathering ability of a space-based telescope of the same cost, astronomer's will choose that guy any day.
Note: IAAA (I am an astronomer)
Unless you want dancing goatse.cx nastiness.
Also, mod to oblivion please.
Somebody needs to get outside.
It is extremely good to see this sort of fierce competition driving astronomy.
As open source developers, we all know the power of competition, how advances on both sides of the OS wars have driven the other to catch up or improve. If this sort of competition drives the development of telescopes then we can expect a lot of advances in science and space over the next few years
This is extremely exciting news. Maybe in years to come we will be able to see the headlines on alien newspapers.
You are not "insightful". You merely repost others' comments and claim them as your own in a pathetic attempt to gain extra karma. Read my post again for the proof of your plagarizim, you scumbag loser.
dunno, maybe you got a virus or something?
Is there a usable spot for a large telescope in the US or Canada that isn't affected by light pollution?
sPh
just have to laugh out loud at that won rick.
.'s to plot with?
15k turns into 1.3 mil0? what kind of math/optics is that?
it's no billyonerrors' hostage ransom, but true to your advise.
may have spelled his name wrong? there's also rumour he's not the king of anything really, despite having 1000's more of
Here's a "close together" example:m m981104.html
http://www.estec.esa.nl/conferences/FPD/info/tos-
Here's a short paper minus images on telescope arrays:t /bthomas_ska_site.html
http://www.atnf.csiro.au/technology/future/2001oc
"The maximum extent of LOFAR is 350 km"
It seems there are proprietary astronomers who like proprietary programmers always think bigger is better when in fact smaller, more spread out is the best choice.
In principle the resolving power of a telescope depends on its diameter -- a bigger one can see finer detail -- but in practice atmospheric turbulence, the same effect that makes stars appear to twinkle, blurs the stars and erases fine detail. This is why the Hubble, even though it is not large, only about 2.4 meters (96 inches), compared with the new giants on the ground, can do breathtaking work.
The proposals sport Brobdingnagian names like the California Extremely Large Telescope, or CELT; Giant Magellan; or the Overwhelming Large Telescope, OWL, a 100-meter-diameter behemoth being contemplated by a collaboration of European nations. And their proponents promise appropriately outsized scientific results.
If you're going to spend a $1B on a telescope, aren't you reaching the point where the money would be better spent to put one in space away from the atmosphere and associated debris rather than sticking it on terra firma?
No, putting a project into space something in space is like going for the "I'd like an inch-thick gold-plate finish with diamond encrusting" when purchasing a car. Consider this: the Hubble Space Telescope cost $1.5 billion in the 1980s, for a 2.4m diameter primary mirror. If we were to scale the cost based on the diameter of the mirror, then a 100m space telescope would cost $62.5 billion, over an order of magnitude more than the proposed ground-based facility.
And don't think that ground-based telescopes are the poor cousins of space-based ones. The European Southern Observatory's Very Large Telescope (VLT) can achieve resolutions better than Hubble, even if the latter had been built without the optical problems, and the VLT cost 1/10th of what Hubble did.
Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
It's a fucking goatse link!
Saying Java is nice because it works on all OS's is like saying that anal sex is nice because it works on all genders.
mod down please
no fucking text here, sorry.
At what point does it become more cost effective to launch smaller space telescopes? Just curious.
It seems to me that if multiple cheaper, smaller telescopes could work together, they could do the work of a single gigantic telescope. I mean, if you combine how ever many small telescopes it takes to get the same input area as the 100m monster, then you could probably get similar power.
In IT we have known about the power of doing distributed processing for some time, perhaps we should let the astronomers in on the secret?
Someone, please, educate me on why bigger is better...(please limit your comments to the subject matter at hand).
Most writers regard truth as their most valuable possession, and therefore are most economical in its use - Mark Twain
An interesting tidbit about very large lenses and mirrors is that in some instances it can take months and even years for the molten glass to cool inside the mold, and that supposedly it's such an intricate process that only few places in the world can manufacture them.
It has to be done very slowly to so that stress doesn't develop in the thick glass from uneven or rapid cooling.
It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
Hello master.
sid=91322
formkey=FNAfGSOllg
This is a joint venture that will be mutually advantageous to both parties involved.
Several people have commented that the money may be better spent on a space telescope. Here's why that may not be true:
Advantages of space:
* Extremely low light pollution and air absorption. This means you can see very dim things that may not be ever visible from the ground.
Advantages of ground:
* Initial cost is about 100-1000 times cheaper for same-sized primary
* Repairs and routine maintenance are possible without a $250 million shuttle launch
* Newer technology is possible, since it's less risky. Hubble uses a lot of electronics from the early 1980s.
Hubble cost $1.5 billion initially plus $0.25 billion per year (http://hubble.nasa.gov/faq.html) for a 2.5-meter telescope.
Since light-collecting power goes as the square of the diameter, a 100-meter telescope has 1600 times the light collecting ability of Hubble. So, if the celestial objects of interest are not background-limited, you can get the same quality image in 1 minute that would take Hubble a whole day to acquire.
...ideally CCD chips would be embedded into the lense -- certainly a molecular nanotechnology based manufacturing process would greatly improve precision here. This would yield resolution improvement in the realm of orders of magnitude. If all goes according to schedule I will be giving an introduction to this and other issues at sdfcon-1 in Las Vegas this coming June entitled Green Astronomy: Paradigms and Solutions for a Sustainable Future Peace, SA Thigpen KL1FE
Interferometry is what you are thinking of and it requires a clock synchronization that is proportional to the wavelength being observed (don't have the exact math on hand). This is already done in radio astronomy but radio frequencies are far lower than visual light requencies. Visual light interfereometry has been tried but currently can't compete with big single observers.
It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
Arizona state in the US has some of the most stringent light controls anywhere. They were enacted a few years ago and I remember hearing the complaints by some and the new light designs to help reach the goals while addresssing the complaints.
Overall, better light designs (shielded from to prevent upward light, more directed lighting, etc) can keep both parties happy.
There's an article on cnn about it from way back when. Googling will also show some of the light designs that are working.
J
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I do it wrong
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All your sporkz are belong to the dead homiez!!
Proof of the gay-linux conspiracy!
that 100-meter monster sure looks brutal.
:-)
sometimes i regret having chosen CS for my degree... sure it's great fun and you can do lots of cool things with computers but man... standing beside one of those monster bridges or buildings or planes or boats or telescopes and knowing that you built it must be awesome
You can make a cluster of telescopes, the technique is called interferometry. However, combining the results from individual dishes requires painstaking detail. The lengths of the signal paths must be matched to a degree less than the wavelength of the signals. For radio astronomy this has been done for a long time, because the wavelengths are quite manageable. The optical equivalents are only quite recent and not that widely deployed, but here is one example that I know of.
Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
Stop advocating the censorship of posts you don't agree with, you little censorship hitler.
'nuff said.
A meter is a device. A metre is a unit of measure. This SHOULDN'T be difficult stuff.
"People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
Most modern astronomical scopes use mirrors. For professional work, refractors haven't been used much outside of solar observing for decades. They are just too damn heavy.
:)
Just an FYI. Reflectors - mirror-based scopes are the norm outside of Walmart.
I would also like to comment that 1 orbit of HST costs about $100 thousand. Thats a lot of money for 90 minutes of time around the world
I don't get it. If nothing travels faster than light, how did we, i.e. the Earth, beat the light out here to be waiting to see it?
I mean, isn't one of the main idea behind the big bang is that everything was in single giant ball before it exploded, creating all the stars and galaxies?
So how does this work then? Any astrophysicsts reading slashdot today care to explain? Thanks.
by combining telescopes you can get the resolution benefits of a huge telescope, however, you will not get the same photon collecting ability which you need for very dim objects.
So yes, you can see very big bright objects with astounding clarity using your idea. But dim things, nope.
Oh, and its called interferometry and is actually one of the first instances of 'distributed' computing, long before it became a slashdot topic (and before slashdot was around). Its early implementations were localized sine they were limited by the lack of a reliable global high speed networks, though nowadays with the internet and internet2 its more feasible to do on a continental scale. If memory serves it wasn't until around 1990 that they were able to do an experiment using telescopes on opposite sides of the planet...
-
A few years back I flew from Oregon to California, over some mountain passes to Texas, and from there to South Carolina in an L-3 Aeronca. (Piper Cub- 75mph on a good day) Believe, there is a whole lot of nothing out there. There are huge chunks of the south western United States that are bone dry and sunny almost every day.
I doubt a lot of it will be usable because of logistical factors. From what I remember, the ground was either flat, hard, and dry, or it wasbroken and impassable to non-donkey based transports.
Getting people to Chile via commercial airlines and then flying them out to the Atacama can't be much more expensive than flying them to Reno and then using a truck or an expensive helicopter to get them on site.
I'm not sure about shipping the big components during construction. One way or the other you're gonna probably have to use heavy lift helicopters to finish the job either way. Those are seriously expensive.
Anyway, there is a lot of worthless land in the u.s., but 10 miles of the Sierra Nevadas is harder to deal with than hundreds of mile sof high plains. Distance != Difficulty
Why do I have this? I don't smoke.
the mirror are so large and focused on such long distance objects, all the supports and equipment do is reduce the photons by a very slight amount. to compare, hold the end of a paperclip as close to your eye as you're comfortable with, and look off into the distance. You'll hardly notice its there.
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It could be worse, it could cost One Hundred...Millllllllion....Dollars!!!!
Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
A Lunascope. Screw wasting our time with piddling Terrascopes that are subject to all sorts of crappy conditions, interference, etc. Just suck it up, make the capital outlay among a bunch of nations, and plant a sucker on the far side of the moon. You know we could do it remotely with rockets, etc. and have this thing kicking it in no time.
-rt
Why reinevent the wheel? I'm sure we can get a few cast off texts from their old library holdings. Has no one thought to ask them out in Area 51?
I'll be brief. Let them build it on the moon!
Keeper of the terrible karma ---
C'mon, weigh it up: vast amounts of money are already being spent on things which are much further down the priority list than astronomy programmes.
Reducing the level of taxation by $1.4 trillion is "spending" money? A tax cut is a reduction in revenues, not an expenditure. Nobody's "spent" anything.
All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
To witness President Kennedy being shot, you'd have to be a little over 40 light years from Earth. If you imagine the light which depicted instants of time on Earth as being like photographs which are shot into space, then every second another would be "dispatched" and would currently be 40 light years out.
But consider that the Earth is constantly rotating. Every "photograph" would be fired off at a slightly different angle. And over a distance of 40 light years, the differences in angle would mean that the "photographs" would be huge distances apart.
So it might be possible to go to a point 40 light years away and peek at the Earth, to see a specific instant in time... but only that instant, because the light depicting the next instant went off in a different direction, and so on.
One is tempted to think that you could just "orbit" the Earth at an altitude of 40 light years to watch things unfold in sequence, but intuition or simple geometry will reveal that you'd have to be going really, really fast to match the Earth's rotation at that distance.
All employees must wash hands before seeking equitable relief.
These guys are all idiots.
They're wasting money and time spending "a billion" dollars on a telescope, and the guys in California are making one too.
They should spend it all on setting up a new MOON mission. And then build an el cheapo telescope there.
Cuz we all know that on the moon the atmosphere is minimal and it wouldn't obstruct astronomer's views much at all.
Radiation will be easy to block on the moon since it's so close. We can send hundreds of unmanned drones to drop off equipment (like LEAD) on to the surface of the moon. Setup small nuclear power plants like the one for Galena Alaska. The Toshiba Mini Nuke. This could run lighting for hydroponics, air recycling systems and water recycling systems inside the moon base for DECADES.
The base could grow their own food, heat up lead to fill up the base interior for radiation shielding and have a pretty darn neat setup.
Sure this may take about 10 years of planning and 20 years of actual implementation and the project cost of maybe 100 billion dollars.
But imagine the fact that the world has finally gotten off its ass to put a base on the frickin' moon!
Don't forget, exposure time above the atmosphere is limited by background cosmic ray saturation.
oh, I might add that the low gravity of the moon would make the telescope portion of the base much cheaper to build, I mean damn man, it's not going to cost hundreds of thousands of dollars to make a computer-controlled support setup to prevent mirrors from sagging like an old pair of melons.
Time it takes to get it up there? Well shoot, NASA took how long to get a man in the moon in the first place?
Instead of using cutting edge designs, just settle with setting up a base. Then from there use the base as a staging point for planning and creation.
There are millions of people wanting to become astronauts! Sure not everyone can fly a space shuttle, but at least you can hire space construction workers or scientists. Have them enlist in a SPACE branch of the military service and pay them peanuts($0.23 an hour), if they don't make it through the training, send them back home with no ties to the military a-la washout lane from Starship Troopers.
Speaking of which, they had a whole lunar base made of a geosynchronous orbiting ring, I think that's a great project also, a little more expensive than possible, but it's cool!
Alright, so maybe 100 billion dollars is a little conservative, but right now we have the underlying technologies to setup any sort of venture we want to the moon. We can charge it on George W Bush's CEO American Express card. It has no limit! (as long as you pay it off in a month)
Our Deficit is big enough as it is, why not add another measely trillion dollars to it?
No need to say again the reasons why this isn't feasible (yet) the way you say. Just wanted to show a link to another interferometer: the VLTI
That machine is so delicate that we weren't allowed to walk near the tunnels (you see them on the picture) when I was visiting the site.
Cheers...
No, it's another bit of bird poo!
This thing looks like it'll be a bitch to clean, and I though my 120mm was a pain! Really puts things into perspective.
I know this is a totally overworked question, but can anyone tell me, with all of this other expenditure in space exploration, failed missions to mars to discover whether it is inhabitable or not - why have we not returned to the moon yet?? Why do we have a long-standing space station orbiting the earth, and no station on the moon?
In addition to the replies that have already gone up to your post, I might point out that these new giant telescope *are* distributed smaller scopes. All of the designs I have seen as well as older scopes such as Keck are a bunch of smaller mirrors bundled together. The 100m OWL isn't going to have a giant mirror but a field of smaller reflective elements. Mirrors like the one in Palomar are about as big as single mirrors are going to get with present technology. The difficulties in trying to make a stable optical element that big are nearly as ridiculous as back in the 50's.
RS
Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
Instead of wasting money on these good for nothing projects, they can clean up the homeless in the cities and give them decent human habitations to live. stupid people in the government.
Before everybody starts a whine about the billion they expect the OWL to build and operate for 20 years, bear in mind we spent about that amount just for airconditioned storage of the hubbel before it was finally put up due to delays in shceduling the launch after 1987's disaster.
:)
OTOH, look at what its found for us. Much of that information is new, some of it has had cosmology shaking results, and all of it is extremely pretty to look at. As an american taxpayer, we have gotten our money back in scientific information many tmes over.
I hope the OWL becomes a reality in my remaining lifetime.
Some things are priceless, for everything else there is always MasterCard
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Cheers, Gene
ISS leaks air and other gasses. It is surrounded by a gas bubble. Any telescope in the area would have these gasses condensing on it's mirror.
That reminded me of a question I've had for a long time. What happens when an astonaut farts in a space station? Does it kind of visibly float around? Do the female astronauts squeek some out and deny they did it while the guys are enjoying lighting-off zero-G stinkies with matches?
Why not Put that Billion Dollars into the public health system..
Even if we built a moon base, there is no way that in 30 years we'd be able to build up sufficient technological industry and infrastructure to construct an entire telescope on the moon out of lunar materials. That leaves shipping it up to the Moon to be operated by people there, which is far more expensive to launch and operate than a space telescope.
Parent is +5 Insightful, if a bit optimistic (re: last paragraph).
the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
See subject for what's ACTUALLY happening.. *sigh*
i said the project cost would be about 100 billion dollars. I never said the telescope would be built, it's just the beginning of the project, basically just to build the base there and then the beginnings of industry. imagine opening it up to commercial contracts though. People from all over the world would want to donate money and supplies and lucrative contracts to build the industry required to mine, refine, and manufacture materials from the moon!
I'll be able to see right up Martian chicks' skirts!
What you're talking is called Very Large Scale Interferometry, and has been done for decades... What do you think the OGR project is for? Optimal Golomb Rulers are used to most efficiently space multiple telecopes in an array for best resolution. Look at the VLA in New Mexico. It has the resolution of a single telescope 22 MILES across, and is as sensitive as a 130-meter dish.
We will split that light into a spectra (the rainbow of the light bouncing off that planet), and the spectra will tell us if there is life on that planet.
It's stunning really, just 20 years ago we thought that might never be possible, now it's just a matter of doing it.
-pyrrho
Keep i mind that when this was built, the Euro was worth a lot less then it is now. It has only recently taken on such value.
It's not really that hard .. as a kid, I saw the Milky Way fairly regularly from my parents' back yard. We were technically just outside the city limits, but there wasn't a street light for miles, so the sky was very dark.
So I'm not too impressed with the Way itself, but the sheer quantity of stars up there still takes me by surprise. Between any two stars, no matter how faint, you can always find another star.
But what's depressing is that all these stars are burning their energy simultaneously. In only a few dozen billion years, it'll all be gone.
Not that this wasn't entirely predictable.
I admire your voracity. please email me at lysol(spamremoveshityoucunt at)lysol.ws
I wish discuss matters of extreme importance with you.
Raw resolution and light gathering ability matters for some projects, but wavelength also matters.
So I guess they won't be able to ask for that "tera-pixel" digital camera to go with it, eh?
"mine's bigger", indeed.
Yow! I'm supposed to have a plan?
In order to resolve small items at a distance, you need to focus light from large apertures. The larger the aperture, the smaller the item which can be resolved. To resolve Kennedy from 40 light years out, your going to need a damn big telescope. One of those "600X MAGNIFICATION" units from Wal-Mart is not going to cut it.
Just imagine the angular resolution you are desiring. Imagine an acute triangle, 1 foot on the small side (to see Kennedys head), and 1.24153916 x 10^18 feet on each of the long sides (== 40 light years). I'd calculate the angle subtended, but anything I own will show ZERO degrees. Lets say it's sufficiently close to zero that your going to need an infinitely large telescope to see it.
This means that those with the money (congress) like it. The administrators like it because here is a project that has made good (albeit after a bumpy start). When an administrator chooses to invest in an existing project, it is lower risk than something new.
NASA has budget problems, but please remember that a lot of it is coming from the bad decisions made on the manned space program. At the same time, without a manned program, Hubble wouldn't be there.
Lets put this into perspective, NASA in a year uses than what it takes to run the US part of the Iraq occupation for a month. I feel for your budget problems, but in reality, NASA is underfunded for what it does.
The article didn't even mention the 9.2-meter Hobby-Eberly Telescope in west Texas, which was built at a fraction of the cost required by other similarly-sized telescopes. (HET cost only $13.5 million.) The most notable cost-savings being that the telescope is always at a constant tilt, and is only configured for spectroscopy, not imaging. But for sheer size-of-light-bucket per dollar, such a design is hard to beat. There are also plans to build a much larger version of the HET --- I forgot how big and I have no URLs to share, but the new telescope would be at least as large as those mentioned in the article.
When you reduce revenues you can otherwise collect, the effect is the same as if you spent it. For example, when I get to reduce the amount of income taxes I because I pay interest on my mortgage, it is the exact same thing financially as if the federal government paid money to my mortgage holder. Part of the problem with the federal budget (eg the massive growing deficit) is due to the fact that they don't consider it spending when it is just that. It's like giving the money away and saying that you didn't spend it. Maybe not technically, but that money's gone. Whether you got something worthwhile out of it is up for debate.
I say no since the tax cut didn't put very much actual money into the economy. The bulk of the cuts don't even come into affect until next year so I can't see how they could've stimulated the economy this past year, especially since the vast majority of the cuts would go into the hands of those already so well off that they wouldn't put it into the economy again very quickly.
IAAE (I am an economist).
I think it would be good for the Europeans to build a 100 meter telescope in Europe. Then, we can come back to the USA and tell the Republicans that the French are building a bigger telescope than we have, and with that technology they might be able to monopolize marketing opportunities in space. With that one sentence, America will commit to building its own 150 meter ground based 5 billion dollar telescope, plus a 10 meter orbiting telescope for good measure, and science will improve dramatically on both continents!
This is my sig.
But seriously, this is about the cost of three or four space shuttle missions. The choice is ours: Study how ants build colonies in zero G for this price, or discover earth like planets around other stars..
Eat at Joe's.
Hubble can also see well into the IR, which is *also* impossible using ground based telescopes
Idiot. What the hell do you think the initials in "UKIRT" stand for?
In any case, sure there are needs for space-based telescopes, especially in the UV. However, the point I was making is that for optical telescopes, it is perfectly possible to build competitive solutions on Earth, at a fraction of the cost of space-based mission. The same applies to radio and submm telescopes, which is why we have facilities like the VLA, Arecibo, the JCMT, ALMA etc etc.
Tubal-Cain smokes the white owl.
..city lighting is important too. The orange sodium lamps, seen in much of London, are prefered because they emit light in a limited range, allowing astronomers the rest of the spectrum.
You're absolutely right, but for the wrong reason.
With the current state of our space program, we can't launch a mission to a moon for a mere $1B dollars, much less build and maintain a telescope there. But we *should* by now have had a space program that regularly conducts manned moon missions, possibly with an outpost or two there as well. Instead, we've spend the last 30 years obsessed over a fancy launch vehicle that is hideously over-expensive and delicate *just* so we can land it like an airplane.
So in other words, yes, it should have been possible to build an "el cheapo" telescope on the moon by now, with the ability to maintain it for less than the cost of overcoming the atmospheric disturbances and higher gravity on Earth.
But it's not, so the telescopes proposed are in fact the cheapest alternatives for their size.
"Orthodoxy is unconsciousness" - Orwell
Is there a usable spot for a large telescope in the US or Canada that isn't affected by light pollution?
Not in North America, but all the light pollution maps show a great location in Asia.
It's a very short drive (as the missile flies) due North of a major commercial center, but the skies are amazingly dark. It's as though there were no industry at all -- at least, not the kind that requires nighttime illumination.
There are even reasonably high mountains, complete with pre-existing infrastructure. And during the astronomers' free time, there's a nearby "Treasure House of Wildlife!"
After all, our entire planet is but a miniscule speck of dust in the cosmos. Why should we let a little treaty matter stand in the way of discovery?
Stressed? Me? Of course not. Stress is what a rubber band feels before it breaks, silly.