Binocular Space Telescope in the Works
museumpeace writes "ABCNews.com's technology pages have a story about NASA's plans to orbit a binocular telescope. Similar in concept to the Arizona telescope reported in /., this new variable baseline interferometer would be able to operate in the UV which is unavailable to terrestrial intstruments. The telescope would have the resolving power of a 120 foot diameter conventional telescope."
I can understand that getting a nice pair of binoculars gives you a sense of depth perception, but when you are looking at something 50 light years away does it really make a difference that you take measurements from 120 feet apart? I mean they could just time lapse the images and then compare them as the Earth is moving way faster, as we are moving around the sun at about 1800 kilometers per second. So really, what good is 120 feet?
This seems to come up every time there's a space telescope article. The moon's not that great a place-- it's not as stable as you think, it's dirty, you get cycled in and out of full sunlight, and you have to land everything softly in a nasty gravity well without any atmosphere to use for braking.
I'm going to have to put in a journal entry or something with why the moon is overrated for space telescopes.