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World's Largest Telescope Begins Production

JohnnyNapalm writes "The Aggie Daily News is reporting today that the first mirrors have been cast for the world's largest telescope. The result of cooperation from some of the foremost institutions in education and science in the nation, the Giant Magellan Telescope stands to operate at a resolution 10 times larger than the Hubble. The project, set to be constructed in Chile, is slated for completion in 2016."

138 comments

  1. Hubble Telescope by Ravatar · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Am I alone in feeling that we haven't even used hubble to the fullest extent of its abilities? Not sure why this is a priority right now.

    1. Re:Hubble Telescope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Except for the fact that we are going to let the Hubble fall out of the sky in the next several years...

    2. Re:Hubble Telescope by toddbu · · Score: 1

      Why not both? There's plenty to see out there in the cosmos. These programs are usually relatively cheap compared to anything spaced-based. As long as we're getting good science then I say spend the cash.

      --
      If you don't want crime to pay, let the government run it.
    3. Re:Hubble Telescope by lightyear4 · · Score: 5, Insightful


      The Hubble will be providing scientific insight long past its stamped expiration date. To quote from TFA:

      The telescope will have four-and-one-half times the collecting area of any current optical telescope and the resolving power of a 25.6-meter (84-foot) diameter telescope - or 10 times the resolution of the Hubble Space Telescope.

      I don't know about you, but given the immense scientific value of the Hubble, investing in further pursuits like this seems a worthwhile and worthy investment.

    4. Re:Hubble Telescope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
      Except for the fact that we are going to let the Hubble fall out of the sky in the next several years...

      The House of Representatives recently approved funding to service the Hubble.

    5. Re:Hubble Telescope by tloh · · Score: 1, Flamebait
      Am I alone in feeling that we haven't even used hubble to the fullest extent of its abilities? Not sure why this is a priority right now.

      Have you bothered to reconcile what you feel with what you know? For example, do you know how easy or hard it is to book Hubble for an observation run? Especially when it most matters? Heavenly phenomenons don't exactly conduct themselves by a schedule tailored to you or anyone elses' convenience. You don't really know when a spactacular supernova or comet collision would afford the opportunity of a lifetime to make unique discoveries.

      Your lukewarm conviction of this as a priority seems to imply you feel you should have a say in how the resources going into this project should be allocated. I have no doubt that you might be a dutiful American tax payer and the GMT partner institutions, more likely than not, utilize public funding. But it should be obvious to anyone familiar with the current administration's stance on global warming that letting politics steer science is an embarassing mistake we should not allow to happen.

      --
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    6. Re:Hubble Telescope by Jules+Labrie · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem with Hubble is that you have to send the space shuttle each time there is a problem with it. So this is quite a little constraint...

      If this is possible to do telescopes on earth that can have the same quality as Hubble(I mean, the quality that would have the successor of the Hubble...), then it's pretty interesting because it will be cheaper at the end (maintenance, upgrading, etc). Even if they need huge mirrors for it.

    7. Re:Hubble Telescope by sp00nz · · Score: 1

      The problem with viewing from the earth is that the atmosphere bends the light just enough for the calculations of objects to be off. That's gonna be alot of math over and over.

    8. Re:Hubble Telescope by tempest69 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The Hubble is a great scope, but we need to go farther. The hubble has flaws of up to 1300 nanometers. Where the magellan has up to 15 nanometer flaws.

      Just for some perspective, a silicon arom has a radius of 1.46 angstroms or .146 nanometers. giving it a .292 nanometers, so were looking at a mirror that is within 50 atoms of perfection.

      Heck, the optic technology alone is enough to have real world impacts. So yea I think the investment is well worth it.

      Storm

    9. Re:Hubble Telescope by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, this is a priority because the partners think it's a priority.

      Carnegie Observatories
      Harvard University
      Massachusetts Institute of Technology
      Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory
      Texas A&M University
      University of Arizona
      University of Michigan
      The University of Texas at Austin

      Look, it's not about having one device, the more devices we have doing research, the better. NASA and ESA run Hubble and will replace it with the James Webb (stupid name IMO) in the next decade.

    10. Re:Hubble Telescope by flubbergust · · Score: 1

      Heck, the optic technology alone is enough to have real world impacts.

      Because we can point it at the moon to see if they actually landed there and silence all nutjobs?

    11. Re:Hubble Telescope by imsabbel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This telescopy will be cheaper in total than a singly shuttle mission to extend hubbles lifetime...

      --
      HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
    12. Re:Hubble Telescope by Poorcku · · Score: 1

      LOL, you said "silicon".

      --
      I take my children to see Madonna(..), but I never for once ever thought I was in the same business.Chris Rea.
    13. Re:Hubble Telescope by Cyberax · · Score: 1

      Yes, investments in astronomy are usually well worth it. For example, CCD sensors (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charge-coupled_devic e) were first developed and perfected as a replacement for photographic plates used in telescopes.

    14. Re:Hubble Telescope by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 1

      Wasn't there talk within nasa, even with funding, that they may not service it because it's just too "dangerous."

    15. Re:Hubble Telescope by Ticklemonster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Speaking of using it to its fullest potential; what are the chances of somebody turning that puppy towards the moon to see if some imagery of the Apollo landings can be had? Would that not be awesome to actually see Tranquility base, with Armstrong and Aldrin's footprints intermingled with all the Moontian footprints left since they came back? (lol) Or even get a shot of the space station coming over the horizon, or the shuttle lifting off (if and when, if and when). I mean why does it have to just be used for outer space stuff? (probably a technical explanation headed my way, but what the heck, it would be cool if it could be used like that)

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    16. Re:Hubble Telescope by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      If it's focus is set at the same as Hubble's the moom will still be too close for it to focus on.

    17. Re:Hubble Telescope by NixieBunny · · Score: 1
      That's not a problem. There is such thing as a pointing model that is used to compensate for the atmosphere and all the various machanical shortcomings of a telescope. They point the scope at a well-known star and see where the telescope drive is actually pointed to get the star centered in the camera, then use the measured errors in a polynomial that corrects for the atmosphere and drive imperfections.

      The atmospheric distortion, or twinkling, is dealt with by adaptive optics. Google it.

      --
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    18. Re:Hubble Telescope by DerekLyons · · Score: 2, Informative
      If this is possible to do telescopes on earth that can have the same quality as Hubble(I mean, the quality that would have the successor of the Hubble...), then it's pretty interesting because it will be cheaper at the end (maintenance, upgrading, etc).
      Except it's not possible, despite the hype in the article. No earthbound telescope will ever be able to see the wavelengths that Hubble does - it's a matter of physics, not technology. The light in those wavelenghts never reaches the ground. Nor does Hubble have to contend with the dust and moisture in the atmosphere.
    19. Re:Hubble Telescope by deglr6328 · · Score: 1

      "The Hubble is a great scope, but we need to go farther. The hubble has flaws of up to 1300 nanometers. Where the magellan has up to 15 nanometer flaws."

      Where'd THAT come from?! hubble was designed to have an abberation less than 1/20 waves at the helium neon laser line of 633 nm (30 nm). It ended up with an error of ~ 1/2 wave and anyway this is irrelevant because the error was corrected completely with costar.

      --
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    20. Re:Hubble Telescope by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Wasn't there talk within nasa, even with funding, that they may not service it because it's just too "dangerous."

      Yes, there was. NASA wants the ability to dock with the space station in an emergency. The orbits of the space station and the Hubble are too far apart for the Shuttle to change course.

    21. Re:Hubble Telescope by MaDeR · · Score: 1

      No, no. This will not silence nuts, because they can always say that photos of landers are fabricated. Remember, paranoia always has answer.

      --
      What modern Obelix would say today? Of course, "Those crazy Americans!".
    22. Re:Hubble Telescope by famebait · · Score: 1

      Am I alone in feeling that we haven't even used hubble to the fullest extent of its abilities?

      No idea if you're alone in it, but your argument makes no sense.

      You mean we should postpone making something better than hubble because ...? hell, I cant't even see that you have a coherent argument at all.

      Should we have waited to deploy transistors that were ready until we had maxed out everything that could be done with tubes and relays too?

      --
      sudo ergo sum
    23. Re:Hubble Telescope by tempest69 · · Score: 1
      I stand corrected. I had the wrong figure, 1.3 microns was the pre-polish aberation. From http://ssd.itt.com/heritage/hubble.shtml

      Thanks for catching my screwup

      Storm

  2. Well, if this one is funded by the schools... by attemptedgoalie · · Score: 2, Insightful

    and not the US Gov't, then THEY get to choose when to pull the plug.

    Not some accountant.

    --
    My mom says I'm cool.
    1. Re:Well, if this one is funded by the schools... by the_weasel · · Score: 1

      Schools are as political as any government, and they have accountants too.

      --
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    2. Re:Well, if this one is funded by the schools... by Guppy06 · · Score: 2, Informative

      AFAIK, both schools are public universities. So instead of the United States Government being able to yank the plug, its in the hands of the State of Texas.

      Sadly, that still might be advantageous.

    3. Re:Well, if this one is funded by the schools... by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      The two Texas Universities are not spearheading this effort; that Aggie article was very misleading. The Carnegie Institute is the major player, and that is a private institution. The remaining partners (except Harvard) are public universities.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    4. Re:Well, if this one is funded by the schools... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 2 Texas schools are bit players in the scope of things. The big 5 are Carnegie, Harvard, MIT, U of A, and Smithsonian

  3. Largest Telescope? by poopdeville · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Largest ptical telescope, perhaps. Arecibo Observatory is still the biggest single telescope, though there are even larger arrays.

    --
    After all, I am strangely colored.
    1. Re:Largest Telescope? by Zzyzygy · · Score: 1

      We're talking optical, not radio. Arecibo is more like an giant antenna than a light gathering device, no?

      -scott

      --
      My other sig is a Glock
    2. Re:Largest Telescope? by luna69 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Largest optical, perhaps...until OWL!

      "With a diameter of 100 meter, OWL [Overwhelmingly Large Telescope] will combine unrivalled light gathering power with the ability to resolve details down to a milli-arc second."

      Link: OWL

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
    3. Re:Largest Telescope? by Shag · · Score: 2, Informative
      Actually, the Thirty-Meter Telescope project might be a little easier to build than the OWL, given its smaller size.

      And of course the GMT is being built as a single scope with one focus, while things like the VLT, Keck and LBT use interferometry to get sharper images.

      (And adaptive optics! I want telescopes with frickin' laser beams strapped to their heads!)

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    4. Re:Largest Telescope? by luna69 · · Score: 2, Informative

      I agree, it'll be easier to build (although OWL will use multiple segments/single focus).

      But...when I read "..milli-arcsecond" resolution (in the optical!) on the OWL site, in spite of its competitors, my knees got weak, my toes curled...And I'm a grown man.

      I and the guy who teaches the class I TA for recently had students calculate how large a primary would be necessary to read a homework page on the moon, from Earth. (assuming, of course, diffraction-limited seeing...hah!). Needless to say, even OWL wouldn't cut the mustard. But it'll be way, way cool, even without laser beams.

      Oh - and speaking of laser beams and telescopes: Apache Point Apollo Laser. (I've been down to see this...very cool!)

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
    5. Re:Largest Telescope? by Shag · · Score: 1
      Arecibo Observatory is still the biggest single telescope, though there are even larger arrays.
      Yep, like the Very Long Baseline Array. Nothin' like being 5,000 miles across to help you see things, I guess. It's interesting to me that at 8.4 meters each, the mirrors will be tied with the Large Binocular Telescope's mirrors which were just installed last year in Arizona. I think the next largest after that may be the 8.3 meter one on the Subaru telescope (National Astronomical Observatory of Japan) here in Hawaii.
      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    6. Re:Largest Telescope? by Shag · · Score: 2, Informative
      Nice. I think there used to be a moon laser out here too, on Maui... LURE. I think it's gone now, though - the MAGNUM is in part of it, I think, and the Pan-STARRS prototype scope is supposed to be going somewhere around there too.

      We play with lasers over on Mauna Kea, too... like this nice 20-watt sodium dye one. Which, for topicality, is located at the world's current largest optical telescope...

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    7. Re:Largest Telescope? by jacksonj04 · · Score: 1

      I still think the approach of launching lots of mirrors and bolting them to a rigid bar to form a device using inferometry will be a far better approach. What's to stop us (except money) building a 10km long bar and bolting say 10 smaller telescopes to it, then launching it to a Lagrange point? Insanely high resolution (inferometry again), no atmospheric disturbance...

      --
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    8. Re:Largest Telescope? by luna69 · · Score: 5, Informative

      For those of you not familiar with why astronomers would place (frickin') lasers onto telescopes, there are multiple reasons.

      The primary reason is to provide a "fake star" that can be monitored for distortion, which helps adaptive optics systems counteract atmospheric distortion in the final telescope image/data. In other words, it helps remove the "twinkle" caused by the atmosphere.

      The laser at Apache Point, as well as at other locations (see previous message), is used to measure the distance to the moon (which is useful in, among other things, studies looking at the accuracy of general relativity).

      The Apache Point laser is capable of measuring the distance to the moon to a millimeter using this device. (think about it: at a telescope, up on a mountain around 10,000 feet, there's probably more 'flex' in the mountain itself!).

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
    9. Re:Largest Telescope? by luna69 · · Score: 1

      Why bolt them onto a big bar?

      At optical wavelengths, they could keep station using very small thrusters perfectly well to within the required tolerances. You could place one at the leading lagrange, another at the trailing lagrange, and get, what - a couple million km? (too tired to do the calculations here).

      We had one of my former profs come and talk to our astro club about a long-range project he's involved with working on x-ray interferometry in space (there are a couple big projects along these lines).

      For X-rays, station-keeping is much more difficult. One has to be within at most a few microns, best yet a few tenths of a micron. I don't think that this is possible yet - but it's a real target due to missions like MAXIM.

      Being able to image things at very fine resolution in the x-ray band will be very, very cool. For example, if you could get 10^-6 arcseconds resolution (right now, a pie in the sky...but at least theoretically possible), you might be able to image a black hole directly (well, ok, its accretion disc and event horizon).

      --
      No gods, no demons, and no masters. Secular Humanism!
    10. Re:Largest Telescope? by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > At optical wavelengths, they could keep station
      > using very small thrusters perfectly well to
      > within the required tolerances.

      You don't actually need to station-keep to within the required tolerances. You just need to measure that accurately. The station-keeping merely has to keep you within the dynamic range of your adaptive optics.

      --
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  4. Cool! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    The only problem is, where shall we find a Giant Magellan who can operate such a big telescope for us?

    1. Re:Cool! by craXORjack · · Score: 1
      --
      Liberals call everyone Nazis yet they are the closest thing to it.
    2. Re:Cool! by TheStonepedo · · Score: 1

      Giant Garmins, perhaps. Giant Magellans, never!

      --
      I'll be your candy shop of infinite deliciousity if you'll be my discotheque of endless rump-shaking.
    3. Re:Cool! by Alien+Being · · Score: 1

      "...where shall we find a Giant Magellan who can operate such a big telescope for us?"

      You head east and I'll head west. Be careful near the edge.

  5. But will we have used the Hubble to its fullest by attemptedgoalie · · Score: 1

    in 2016?

    Might as well get to work now!

    --
    My mom says I'm cool.
  6. Capricorn One by pipingguy · · Score: 4, Funny


    Will it be able to show the moon landings?

    1. Re:Capricorn One by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I couldn't find any information on their webpage to indicate if they include some sort of time travel device, so my guess is no :)

    2. Re:Capricorn One by wbren · · Score: 1
      Will it be able to show the moon landings?
      Obviously not! The moon program is just a clever hoax, remember? Why make it more difficult to pull off? You obviously need to take some at-home coverup classes.
      --
      -William Brendel
    3. Re:Capricorn One by spudchucker · · Score: 4, Funny

      Trust me, if the moon is going to land, you won't need a telescope.

    4. Re:Capricorn One by m00nun1t · · Score: 1

      All you need to see the site of the moon landings is to drive to arizona!

    5. Re:Capricorn One by furanku · · Score: 1

      And even if, the conspiracy idiots will find some new "mistakes" in the pictures. It's not that they don't believe. They simply ignore all facts because they prefer to belive in conspiracy, that's why all discussions with them are and will be fruitless. Simply believing that hundreds or thousands of people can keep a secret for so long is ridicoulus. If I want some news to be spread all over the town, I know some people to wich I just have to tell that as a "secret" ...

    6. Re:Capricorn One by Foobar+of+Borg · · Score: 1
      Simply believing that hundreds or thousands of people can keep a secret for so long is ridicoulus.

      Especially people like the Soviets who had a vested interest in exposing any kind of fraud. Between that and all the gradual technical accomplishments that were produced to (1) get someone into space in the first place, and (2) dock ships, deal with EVA and other problems that one would need to deal with to get to the moon; and along with (3) all the film from places like Grumman Engineering that details every tiny bit of the production of the lunar modules, and (4) etc. etc., you clearly need the biggest cluestick in the world to hit these people with. Even then, it might not work.

    7. Re:Capricorn One by antispam_ben · · Score: 1

      All you need to see the site of the moon landings is to drive to arizona!

      No, you're wrong, that area is now off limits and is being used by two "Mars" Rovers...

      --
      Tag lost or not installed.
  7. Why is it being compared to the Hubble? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Hubble isn't really all that big. There are plenty of larger telescopes.

  8. arn't orbiting telescopes better? by Qnaal · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    it seems a shame to spend all this money on a grounded telescope, when it will heve to point through our atmosphere. i didn't get a chance to completely RTFA, but don't orbiting telescopes get much less interference? or am i missing something?

    1. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by lightyear4 · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's true, but it's simple economics, unfortunately. To build an earthbased telescope, it is cheaper by a factor far outweighing the costs of hoisting the equivalent mass into orbit. On a side note, most ground telescopes utilize correctional algorithms to help with atmospheric distortion. Sure, stars sparkle down here, and dont up there, but NASA's purse is a bit light lately.

    2. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Unfortunately adaptive optics doesn't help with frequencies that are blocked by the opaque (at those frequencies) atmosphere.

      As far as I can tell this telescope does not use adaptive optics. Why not? Because the mirror is so enormous, I guess. Isn't there a method to use materials with variable refractive properties that can be placed on top of the mirror?

    3. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by bhima · · Score: 1

      Sadly it also presumes that you actually can get something into orbit.

      --
      Nothing in the world is more dangerous than sincere ignorance and conscientious stupidity.
    4. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by william_w_bush · · Score: 3, Insightful

      yes, but with adaptive optics and reprocessing the difference is not as big, and the operating costs are nowhere close, and if they add enough additional capabilities (can't do ir/uv in atmosphere, but some radio could help) it might be useful. Few earth telescopes will ever rival hubble however, the enormous field of view coupled with the amazing contrast allowed by its orbit really can't be matched on earth, at least not without additional processing.

      for actual scientific purposes, and not pretty pictures it should be as useful.

      --
      The first rule of USENET is you do not talk about USENET.
    5. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by Zzyzygy · · Score: 3, Informative

      It does use adaptive optics. Have a peek at the tech section of the GMT site, here: http://www.gmto.org/tech_overview>

      From the aforementioned link: The GMT secondary mirror is composed of seven thin adaptive shells, with each segment mapping to a single primary mirror segment. The adaptive secondary will provide diffraction-limited performance over modest fields of view and ground-layer adaptive optics over a field of ten to twenty arcminutes in diameter.

      -scott

      --
      My other sig is a Glock
    6. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      It all depends on how much access either U of TX or TAMU has to launch facilities. I'm guessing "not much," and hauling all the stuff up the Andes is likely cheaper/easier.

      The State of Texas could set up a nice little operation, say, near Brownsville, but the states seem to be more content in wishing and hoping a federal facility gets built with federal money instead. For example, the State of Florida's launch facilities are just some old pads being borrowed/shared/leased/etc. from NASA and/or the DOD.

    7. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by Shag · · Score: 1
      (can't do ir/uv in atmosphere, but some radio could help)
      Eh? You're right about UV, but the folks I've been operating the scope for lately would be pretty upset if I told them that all that stuff they were doing with our IR cameras... well, we were just faking it! ;)

      Most of the Mauna Kea Observatories - basically all the ones on the ridges - are either visible-optimized with infrared capabilities, infrared-optimized with visible light capabilities, or dedicated infrared.

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    8. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by jurt1235 · · Score: 1

      The technology to cut back the interference is one which is from the military used for guiding the first part of a nuclear warhead. They use a laser which reflects back through the atmosphere, measure the distortion and then calculate back the atmospheric turbulence. With some adaptation this can be used to als calculate the lightwaves from the laser back to its nice straight line, and with that the other lightwaves coming from anywhere else.

      Bigger issue is actually light polution: To have a good working telescope, you want as little backgroundlight as possible. Those places get harder and harder to find.

      The resolution enhancement has been done for ages by now by radiotelescopes which have been setup in arrays to act together as one big telescope (like in Drente, Holland).

      --

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    9. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by drsquare · · Score: 1, Interesting

      NASA's purse a bit LIGHT? I can't think of many non-military organisations which have bigger budgets. Compared to the results they produce, NASA get astronomical amounts of money, no pun intended. Where does it all go?

      We need a proper space age with proper engineers to build giant telescopes in space. None of this 'let's spend hundreds of billions on a badly-designed space shuttle then keep it on the ground because a spec of paint is out of place.'

      Get some proper reliable, efficient launch systems, then get some telescope-building facilities in outer space, and build a 200m telescope, no flaws, no imperfections, and we can do some proper observing. With the money and technology available we should be able to see into the future by now, not a few low-detail pictures of nearby nebulae.

    10. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by Firethorn · · Score: 3, Informative

      I can't think of many non-military organisations which have bigger budgets

      I can. 2005 Numbers:
      Department of Health & Human Services: 584B
      Department of Education: 56.5B
      Department of Veterans Affairs: 32.5B
      Department of Housing & Urban Development: 32B
      Department of Homeland Security: 29B
      Department of State: 27.5B
      Department of Energy: 23.8B
      Department of Agriculture: 21.4B
      Department of Justice: 20.2B
      NASA: 16.1B
      Cheaper Departments include: Treasury, Transportation, Labor, Interior, Drug Administration, EPA, and Commerce. They generally run 8-15 billion each.

      Source: Washington Post

      --
      I don't read AC A human right
    11. Re:arn't orbiting telescopes better? by william_w_bush · · Score: 1

      err yeah, sorry you're right but i believe those are more the exception than the rule. outside of mauna kea and a few others in extreme locations (which is most new scopes nowadays), ir is harder to get on planet.

      --
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  9. The VLT?.. Interferometers? by plasmacutter · · Score: 1, Interesting
    The hubble has been obsolete for a while. The VLT, an on-planet operation, has been using it's multiple "world's largest" lenses for interferometry for a while.

    If this is going to beat it out the lenses will have to be tremendous. It was considered a feat of engineering manufacturing and shipping the VLT's lenses

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    1. Re:The VLT?.. Interferometers? by ReeceTarbert · · Score: 1

      If you want big as in "mind boggingly big" or maybe even Overwhelmingly Large, you may want to check ESO's next step: a 100-m optical telescope called OWL, Overwhelmigly Large Telescope -- and yes, this one of those "my telescope is bigger than yours" posts! :p

    2. Re:The VLT?.. Interferometers? by PigIronBob · · Score: 1

      MIRRORS not !!%##$!ing lenses

      --
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  10. Giant Magellan Telescope by Godman · · Score: 0, Troll

    Wow, it must be really big. Look, it even says so, right there in the name. "Giant Magellan Telesope".

    I wonder what they are trying to prove? Why not just go with the name "Magellan Telescope"?

    --
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    1. Re:Giant Magellan Telescope by hkfczrqj · · Score: 1

      There is already a Magellan project, a 2 telescope optical interferometer:

      http://www.ociw.edu/magellan/

    2. Re:Giant Magellan Telescope by Eric604 · · Score: 1

      There appears to be some kind of threshold for telescopes, go beyond that and you have a giant telescope. Don't ask me why they don't use the SI prefixes, megascope, gigascope, petascope, yottascope, microscope.

    3. Re:Giant Magellan Telescope by gumpish · · Score: 2, Interesting

      There is already a Magellan project, a 2 telescope optical interferometer

      Grandparent has a point though. This naming convention is a poor choice. What will they call the next one? "OMG The Really REALLY Big Ginormous Magellan Telescope"? And the one after that?

      Marketroids (and apparently the ivory tower residents responsible for naming telescopes) need to learn from the debacle of USB Hi-Speed vs Full-Speed. Future-proof the meaning of your technology's name by assigning it based on absolute, and NOT relative, criteria. "Giant" has no real meaning. "25.6m" (the resolving power of the GMT) does have a meaning that will persist into the future.

    4. Re:Giant Magellan Telescope by tylernt · · Score: 1

      [What will they call the next one? "OMG"...]

      Same thing happened in radio. They called everything above 1MHz "HF" or High Frequency. Then they realized there was a /lot/ of spectrum up there, and called everything above 50MHz VHF (Very HF). Then they realized that was still a _huge_ chunk of spectrum, so everything above 400MHz was deemed UHF (Ultra HF). Then they're like oh crap, that's still a huge swath of spectrum above *that*, so they named everything above 1GHz microwave. Whew!!

      --
      DRM 'manages access' in the same way that a prison 'manages freedom'
  11. Clear Picture? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hope they can see Uranus clearly...

  12. Photos by spudchucker · · Score: 4, Informative
  13. Why only 10? by Michael_Munks · · Score: 0

    Why not 100?

  14. Wow. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine a beowulf cluster of these!

  15. It works great by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    They can peer into the bedroom windows of sexy coeds from THOUSANDS of miles away.

    1. Re:It works great by Zzyzygy · · Score: 1

      All the images would be inverted. They'll need some kind of erection device... :-)

      -scott

      --
      My other sig is a Glock
  16. A hex-structured mirror? by Decimal · · Score: 1

    Can someone please explain how a mirror would work for this (each individual mirror is made up of smaller hex-pieces) if it's made up of many, many small pieces with holes in between? I thought you needed a large, flat unbroken surface for each mirror?

    --

    Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
    1. Re:A hex-structured mirror? by william_w_bush · · Score: 2, Insightful

      nope, many small mirrors are easier to manufacture by far (large mirrors have too many defects to be useful, or cheap), and adaptive optics requires that the mirrors have a modifiable geometry to properly compensate for the atmospheric interference. the break in the mirrors do not reflect light, so as long as the angles are correct it is not noticable.

      --
      The first rule of USENET is you do not talk about USENET.
    2. Re:A hex-structured mirror? by Decimal · · Score: 1

      That makes sense. And, after reading more, I may have misunderstood the idea. The hex shapes are the holes in the mirror, not the mirror. Weird.

      --

      Remember "Bring 'em on"? *sigh
    3. Re:A hex-structured mirror? by Shag · · Score: 1

      Hmmm... the GMT site seems to indicate that the mirrors either are hexagonal or are round but in hexagonal frames of a sort. I don't see how this would result in hexagonal holes, though. In the case of the Keck design, the hole to the cassegrain focus is hexagonal because there's one hexagonal segment "missing" to make the hole - but Keck's segments are only something like 1 meter each. In the case of the GMT, the segments are so large that it's simpler to just have a round hole in the middle of one.

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    4. Re:A hex-structured mirror? by Shag · · Score: 1
      adaptive optics requires that the mirrors have a modifiable geometry to properly compensate for the atmospheric interference
      Hmm... AO typically uses a thin deformable mirror further down the light path, which has its shape altered a lot of times a second. Active supports like the "wiffle trees" used on Keck do move individual mirror segments to maintain the overall curve of the mirror as the telescope is moved throughout the course of the night, but they're (hopefully!) not actually deforming the mirror segments, and they're generally not correcting the alignment of the mirror segments anywhere near as rapidly as an AO mirror moves.
      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    5. Re:A hex-structured mirror? by rjforster · · Score: 2, Informative

      >not actually deforming the mirror segments

      IIRC The mirror segments were deformed during construction. The mirror segments need to be ground to the correct shape (with a pretty tight definition of correct). I belive they were deformed in such a way that the actual shape ground was an easy one to do. When the mirrors were released they sprung back to their original overall shape but with the surface ground to what was needed for the final mirror. Neat way of getting around the problem.

    6. Re:A hex-structured mirror? by LMCBoy · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's one piece of glass, with a single, smooth surface on the front, 8.4 m in diameter. The hexagonal "pieces" are holes on the backside. It basically looks like a big honeycomb. This design gives you great stiffness and strength, with only 20% the weight that a solid mirror would have.

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
  17. Re:Great ... by Adrilla · · Score: 1

    It's not quite that powerful. (rimshot)

    --

    "Plans are for fools! Oglethorpe, the plutonian (Aqua Teen Hunger Force)
  18. Obsolescence depends on wavelength. by Shag · · Score: 1

    I'd love to see a comparison of the VLT and Hubble in the ultraviolet band, for example. ;)

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    1. Re:Obsolescence depends on wavelength. by mbrother · · Score: 1

      And on resolution, too, still. I've got Hubble data coming in this week, imaging, in the optical (600 nm), with a resolution of 0.1 arcseconds. Tell me what telescope I can do that on right now, other than the Hubble. Most of the AO stuff you hear about is for near-infrared observations, which won't always do the job.

      --
      Professor of Astronomy, Author of Spider Star & Star Dragon (Tor)
    2. Re:Obsolescence depends on wavelength. by Shag · · Score: 1

      0.1", shiny! On the 2.2m where I work, we get all excited when we get 0.3-0.4" infrared or 0.6" visible. I think Keck is supposed to be able to get down to 0.2" or less, conditions permitting, but that might involve the use of AO and/or interferometry. I'm supposed to be up at Keck on Tuesday, so I'll see if I can find out.

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  19. Wow by Suicide+Machine · · Score: 2, Funny

    I guess scientists suffer from penis envy too.

    "Oh yea, well my telescope is bigger then yours!"

    Or would it go...

    "Hey baby, look, _my_ telescope has a lens that's 40,000 pounds, it'll be 84 feet of girth, and when it gets heated up it takes 3 months to cool"

    1. Re:Wow by Shag · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there's an ongoing mirror DSW. Mostly in the "largest monolithic mirror" category, which was at 8.3m with Subaru, then went to 8.4 with the LBT and now GMT. Now we need someone to do 8.5m.

      Keck held the "largest segmented mirror" one for quite a while. Still does, depending who you ask. I think Hobby's (in Texas) may be a larger mirror, but Hobby only rotates and doesn't tilt; they move the secondary instead, and thus they end up using less of the primary mirror at a time than Keck does.

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    2. Re:Wow by Suicide+Machine · · Score: 1
      The primary mirror of the HET is the largest yet constructed, at 11.1 x 9.8 meters. At any given time during observations, only a portion of the mirror is utilized. The HET's 9.2 meter effective aperture makes it currently the world's third largest optical telescope. http://www.as.utexas.edu/mcdonald/het/het.html

      ...Ten meters in diameter, the mirror is composed of 36 hexagonal segments that work in concert as a single piece of reflective glass. http://www2.keck.hawaii.edu/geninfo/about.php

      Keck is almost a meter larger, my strong suite isn't in astronomy, but it's my favorite backyard pastime. So I'm not sure about the tilt systems.

      I got a nice reflector though. :)

    3. Re:Wow by NixieBunny · · Score: 1

      The LBT in Arizona is soon to become the largest optical teelscope in terms of collecting area, after its second 8.4 meter mirror is installed. LBT stands for Large Binocular Telescope. The idea is that two big mirrors are mounted a ways apart, giving a total size in one axis of about 24 meters. This permits interferometric observation with 3 times the resolution (in one axis only) of a single 8.4 meter mirror. This telescope is being built on Mt. Graham in eastern Arizona. [I know a bunch of people building it, and I work on the radiotelescope down the road from it.] The Giant Magellan Telescope will provide the same resolution as the LBT does, but in all directions at once. It will also have about 4 times the light-collecting area.

      --
      The determined Real Programmer can write Fortran programs in any language.
  20. It's all about the Benjamins, baby. by Shag · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Price of putting the 2.5-meter Hubble Space Telescope in orbit, and installing its corrective glasses:

    Somewhere on the order of $2-4 Billion.

    Price of building both 10-meter Keck Telescopes on Mauna Kea:

    About $200 Million.

    Soooo... for the cost of one orbiting telescope (and that wasn't even counting the later servicing missions), you could build 20-40 terrestrial telescopes, each with four times the diameter.

    Oh, and as a data point... expected price of building the 30-meter Telescope:

    About $1 Billion.

    Launching stuff is way more expensive than getting it places on boats or trucks. :)

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
    1. Re:It's all about the Benjamins, baby. by Hays · · Score: 1

      Well this isn't quite a fair comparison. You're comparing the cost of the first ever optical space telescope to the 1,000th ever research class terrestrial telescopes. The hubble price also has all sorts of NASA budget bloat included.

      So I think you're wrong when you say that we could build 40 terrestrial telescopes of 4x diameter of a space telescope.

      I think I could build a hubble class space telescope, and have it launched, for much less than a billion. And a space shuttle wouldn't be the launch platform. I know that might impact the design of the telescope, but we can be creative.

    2. Re:It's all about the Benjamins, baby. by Shag · · Score: 2, Informative
      Okay, so maybe it's 20 terrestrial scopes instead of 40. :)

      "Hubble Class" is a dangerous phrase. The thing that made Hubble expensive wasn't that it was a certain size - it was that it, like every terrestrial telescope, allowed for upgrades, switching in new instruments, and so on.

      All other space telescopes that I'm aware of - using the forthcoming James Webb Space Telescope as an example - don't do that. They're non-upgradeable, with "no user-serviceable parts." They're not dependent on the Shuttle in any way. In some cases, like Webb, they're not even destined for orbit, but for a Lagrange point. (Others, like the current Spitzer scope, are in orbit, of course.) That makes them a lot cheaper than Hubble - but it also gives them a shorter mission life, less flexibility, and no option for upgrades down the road.

      As for Hubble being the "first ever optical space telescope" (which it wasn't, if you count the OAO UV observatories NASA launched 20-25 years earlier) and Keck being "the 1,000th ever research class terrestrial telescopes" - keep in mind that the Kecks used that segmented mirror design, which was completely untested and radical at the time they came up with it, and had a 66% larger diameter than anything else out there (the Soviet BTA 6-meter was the largest out there before it). So while Keck may have been the 1,000th ever research class terrestrial telescopes, they were quite unlike those that came before them.

      A single shuttle mission costs more than most of the largest optical telescopes in the world today.

      --
      Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  21. Yes and no by jd · · Score: 2, Interesting
    The difference between a basic telescope in space and a highly sophisticated, adaptive one on Earth probably would be negligable.


    However, put that same sophisticated, adaptive telescope in space, and I'd be willing to bet you'd see yet further improvement. Besides which, even a composite telescope is going to be limited in size, due to the fact that you can't correct all of the errors - the machinary won't be capable of altering the positions of the mirrors accurately enough, or measuring their positions for computational correction.


    In space, you should be able to build much larger composite mirrors, as you should be able to place things much more accurately. If the mirrors are made in space, then that would be even better, as there wouldn't be so many flaws that would need correcting.


    Instead of building one super-giant telescope, they might be better building two or three slightly smaller giant telescopes, then hooking them up as an interferometry array. The reason being that you'll get diminishing returns on how much light you can get in anyway, an array allows you to obtain greater accuracy and you can use the array as multiple single telescopes if there is nothing requiring the extra detail.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
    1. Re:Yes and no by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      In theory you could just make a whole swarm of cheap 10 cm mirrors that fly in formation and form a composite mirror. The difficulty would be keeping their positions precisely aligned. Something like this would be easier to set up either in a very high orbit or in solar orbit - since the further you get away from gravity the smaller the delta-v you get when moving a few m in any direction.

      I'm guessing it will still be far cheaper to build and test the mirrors on Earth though - otherwise you need to construct some kind of facility in space. Then again, if the mirrors are small it might work out - you don't need as much power and the oven doesn't need to be as big. I'm not sure how long the mirrors need to stay warm - you could just put them in "pizza boxes" and park them in orbit until they've set. You could safely move a cooling mirror around in space without worrying too much about vibrations as long as you only apply gentle thrust to it.

      However, if you want big mirrors, I'm guessing it will be a long time before we can build them in space...

    2. Re:Yes and no by John+Hasler · · Score: 1

      > In theory you could just make a whole swarm of
      > cheap 10 cm mirrors that fly in formation and
      > form a composite mirror. The difficulty would be
      > keeping their positions precisely aligned.

      As I mentioned elsewhere, you don't need to keep them extremely closely aligned: you need only measure their alignment precisely so that you can compensate.

      --
      Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
    3. Re:Yes and no by jd · · Score: 1
      There would be a problem with cooling the mirrors evenly (no big problem, as space has a fairly uniform background temperature). You'd get no rippling from air currents or non-zero gradients. The trick would be to build a system whereby cooling was controlled, as otherwise heat would escape too rapidly.


      The best way to do that is to build a chamber with highly reflective walls, to keep the heat in, but have many pinholes in it to allow heat to radiate out. Either that, or have the walls made of two different metals, and use the peltier effect to pump heat at a totally controllable rate.


      (In the latter scenario, you'd have a few thermal webcams hooked up to a computer that evened out any variation in the temperature by controlling the power fed to each of the peltier devices.)


      Producing the glass from scratch in space should produce purer glass, for the same reason that producing drugs in space should produce purer drugs - things are much more controllable and manipulable in a microgravity.


      Cooling the glass in space should produce a near-100% defect-free surface, as almost all causes of defects should be eliminated. Not all, but most.


      Polishing the mirror will be the hard part, as space isn't kind to machinary. That is possible to work around, however. There are no obvious benefits to polishing in space EXCEPT that because you don't get stresses from a subsequent launch, you don't risk losing precision, so can go to the limits of what the machinary can do.

      --
      It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  22. Southern African Large Telescope... by reg · · Score: 3, Informative

    For something a little closer to completion than 2016, check out the Southern African Large Telescope. Scheduled to open in November, and will be the biggest optical telescope in the southern hemisphere.

    Regards,
    -Jeremy

  23. it's not as obsolete as you may think... by randumspin · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I had the wonderful experience of being an undergraduate in astrophysics at UC Santa Cruz, where a grant in adaptive optics was paving the way for ground-based telescopes. By shining a laser straight where the telescope is pointed, aberrations and distortions from the atmosphere can be measured and exactly countered by the telescope, effectively cancelling atmospheric effects to a remarkable degree. Check out http://cfao.ucolick.org./ The main telescope was outside of San Jose, CA, which might seem a strange location for a telescope due to its proximity to a large city. But since all of the streetlamps in San Jose are sodium (whose spectral properties are well known and simple), those features can be subtracted from any measured spectra and in conjunction with adaptive optics, the telescope outside northern california's largest city produces world-class astronomy. This telescope being built should be pretty neat. I wonder how they will deal with gravitational aberrations. Plus scientists won't ever need to face the threat of government letting their instrument "deorbit" while still producing good data.

  24. production? by matt+me · · Score: 1

    now it's a production box, I hope they've disabled error messages, or they could expose secure information.

  25. Impressive by imsabbel · · Score: 1

    While i dont like multi-face mirrors optically (like in good-loooking, not good optical properties :D ), those are really impressive.

    Its also interesting just how long those mirrors need to cool down... in our modern, fast-paced world a mirror cooling for more than half a year or so seems like something from another age...

    --
    HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
  26. Oh Word? by Girl+Scout · · Score: 1

    Now I can finally spy on my neighbors across the street!

  27. Distortion? by Moggie68 · · Score: 1

    This telescope may have a better resolution than Hubble but it's on Earth. Will the atmospheric distortion (or whatever is the technical term) cancel out that benefit?

    1. Re:Distortion? by NixieBunny · · Score: 1

      Adaptive optics takes care of that. The secondary mirror is very thin and held in place by hundreds of magnets suspended from hundreds of computer-controlled eletromagnets attached to the secondary support frame. These magnets allow a computer to warp the secondary mirror to compensate for the atmospheric distortion of the wavefront. Now they just have to figure out how to make the secondary mirrors without breaking them - a 1 meter diameter, 1.6mm thick piece of curved glass is not exactly easy to work with.

      --
      The determined Real Programmer can write Fortran programs in any language.
  28. Re:The VLT?.. Lenses? by Shag · · Score: 1

    Oh, and, um, by the way, I think you might mean mirrors, not lenses. Refractors don't really scale all that well. :(

    --
    Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
  29. How did the hubble... by j.a.mcguire · · Score: 1

    move into position to take a shot?

    like surely it'd run out of thrusters after a few turns?

    did it have some kinda gyroscope built into it?

    1. Re:How did the hubble... by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      did it have some kinda gyroscope built into it?

      Yep. Six of 'em, but they've been dying off. This is part of the reason why it's being retired. If it loses any more, they can't control its attitude, and then it could wind up on a potentially dangerous uncontrolled reentry.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  30. resolution 10 times greater than hubble by Positrix · · Score: 1

    stands to operate at a resolution 10 times larger than the Hubble
    But since it is earth-based won't the images be blurred by the atmosphere?

    1. Re:resolution 10 times greater than hubble by Celandine · · Score: 2, Informative

      They intend to use adaptive optics to compensate for the effects of the atmosphere, though if you read the science case they haven't quite decided on how to do this yet.

  31. It's Microsoft again by LupeSpywalper · · Score: 0

    The result of cooperation from some of the foremost institutions in education and science in the nation, the Giant Magellan Telescope stands to operate at a resolution 10 times larger than the Hubble. The project, set to be constructed in Chile, is slated for completion in 2016.

    Microsoft Windows Vista will be released in 2017... Coincidence? I think nay. Maybe they will release "Universe Map", the Google Maps killer, as an integrated part of the new OS ?
    Right now they try to market Microsoft Magellan as an Office application.

  32. I guess this means... by CZA2006 · · Score: 1

    ...We could use this to 'ignite' a war with the giant magellans? Perhaps we could light a match on this end...

    and set the magellanic cloud on fire?

    However if it fails, I for one will welcome our new giant magellanic overlords.

  33. Report from the lab by LMCBoy · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Steward Observatory Mirror Lab had an open house yesterday for observatory personnel, which I attended.

    The spin-cast oven is huge. In these pictures, you only see the top portion of it, it actually fills the floor below as well. I believe this is the only large spin-cast mirror facility in the world. The idea behind spin-casting is that, by spinning the molten glass as it is slowly cooled, you automatically get a paraboloid top surface. This makes the final shaping of the mirror much easier, since the first-order shape is already there.

    Actually, in the case of the GMT, it will use seven mirrors, six of which are off-axis. The off-axis mirrors will obviously have a more complicated surface than a typical on-axis paraboloid. The mirror being cast now is an off-axis mirror; it is a proof-of-concept that they can grind an eight-meter chunk of glass to an off-axis paraboloid shape with a surface RMS of 20 nanometers (!).

    In a few months when the mirror has cooled and solidified, it will be removed from the oven, cleaned, ground, and eventually, polished. The stress-lap polisher is very impressive. It has a network of stress actuators above it, which can dynamically change the shape of the polisher's surface as it travels across the mirror.

    It's interesting that the "Aggie Daily News" was chosen as the linked story, which makes it sound like UT Austin and Texas A&M are the major players in the GMT, along with a handful of other, unnamed institutions. In fact, the Carnegie Institute is the impetus behind the project, and the U of Arizona is providing the mirrors. I think this UA News article is much more informative.

    --
    Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    1. Re:Report from the lab by Danzigism · · Score: 1

      cool comment.. thanks for the info.. you're sig is neat too hehe

      --
      *plays the Apogee theme song music*
    2. Re:Report from the lab by HorsePunchKid · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the fascinating links! Interesting trivia: To get the newly-cast 20-ton mirror out of the oven, they glue it onto a set of large metal discs, then lift it out. Now that's adhesion!

      --
      Steven N. Severinghaus
  34. giant telescope by pedicabo · · Score: 0

    The world's largest telescope on the world's most geologically active zone. Let's hope they get to use it a couple of times before the earthquake.

  35. SALT is a Hobby-Eberly clone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quite a reasonable thing to build, but there's nothing at all novel about it. It's a clone of the Hobby-Eberly Telescope at McDonald observatory on top of Mt. Fowlkes near Ft. Davis, Texas.

  36. No, you still can't image the Apollo landers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    The largest dimension on the Apollo landers is 9.07 m, diagonally between the landing legs (it's a 21 foot square). The moon's closest approach to the earth is 363,104 km. Divide those two numbers, and you get the angular size in radians: 2.36e-8 radians, or 0.00487 arcsecond.

    With a 27m diameter, the diffraction limit on telescope resolution is 10^8 cycles/radian. So if there were no atmosphere, it would be barely possible.

    With an atmosphere, there are problems. A typical good seeing limit is 1 arcsecond (corresponding to 1864 m on the moon). The best on the planet (Dome C, in the middle of Antarctica, at a very good time) is 0.2 arcseconds (373 m on the moon).

    It's possible for adaptive optics to get good enough to allow that much correction, but it's going to be difficult.

    Hoewever, if you want optical evidence for the Apollo landings, just shine a bright light at the moon and look for the retroreflector arrays the astronauts left there. That experiment has been done a zillion times in the last few decades.

  37. No, you don't need an unbroken surface by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    You just need a very, very accurately aligned surface. For moderate sizes, this is easiest to achieve by just making the whole mirror a solid piece. As the mirror gets larger, the stiffness needed to hold its shape to within a fraction of a wavelength of light gets more and more difficult to achieve. Above 5m (the 200 inch Hale telescope), you have to change to active supports, where you measure and compensate for gravity sag rather than just trying to be stiff enough.

    There's still a tradeoff, though. The mirror needs to be stiff enough to hold its shape between support points. A thinner mirror weighs less, but requires more active supports.

    Past 8m (27 ft), it's just not feasible to build or transport a single mirror, so folks cut it into pieces, effectively sending the mirror thickness to zero in some places. This further complicates the active support system, but it's possible.

    The gaps between mirror segments are no different than the shadow of the spider supporting the secondary mirror; they're just places you don't get any light from. They don't pose any particular imaging problem.

    You can cut the round mirrors into hexes and pack them closer; this reduces the overall size of the telescope and makes it easier to build. But after considering the posibilities, the GMT folk decided to leave the mirrors round and accept larger gaps. This actually makes a slightly better telescope. No cutting means more mirror area. Wider edge-to-edge gives a better diffraction limit on resolution. And it turns out the round edges produce a nicer point spread function.

  38. Clueless by DerekLyons · · Score: 1
    Well, if this one is funded by the schools and not the US Gov't, then THEY get to choose when to pull the plug.

    Not some accountant.

    What, you think those schools don't have accountants? You don't think that at some time in the future that the cost of repairs/maintenance/upgrades won't figure into the decision to continue with or dismantle this telescope?
  39. Expect it to work like the LBT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    GMT is basically a scaled-up LBT, and the LBT is getting adaptive secondaries based on the MMT design. They're just waiting to see the LBT adaptive secondary work.

  40. mods by Eric604 · · Score: 1

    What idiot modded this as troll? He made an fair observation. Technically it IS a silly name, how can you call something 'giant' when it is almost certain that an even bigger one will be build? A hypothetical example: Is it still a giant when we have space telescopes 100x the size of this one?

  41. Woah by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    I like this visualisation of the size of this massive thing.

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  42. somethiing to keep in mind by RayBender · · Score: 2, Interesting
    People keep comparing this large ground-based telescope to Hubble, and invariably say seomthing like "we can do just as good as Hubble at 1/10th the price". Nonsense, for three reasons:

    1) Absorption. The atmosphere absorbs in many wavelengths of interest, including the UV and parts of the IR. There are some projects that can never be done on the ground.

    2) Background emission. The atmosphere "glows" at a number of wavelengths; this acts as a source of background contamination and reduces your sensitivity.

    3) Blurring. The stars twinkle. This reduces the sharpness of ground-based images by an enormous factor (for GMT in the optical, excluding AO, by a factor of about 200).

    People keep mentioning "adaptive optics" as a way to overcome the blurring from the atmosphere. But the harsh truth is that AO doesn't work all that well, for situations where you actually need to get rid of the effects of the atmosphere. Sure, it sharpens up pictures of binary stars pretty well, but it leaves a bunch of uncalibrated "scruff" near the star that e.g. makes it impossible to look for planets near that star. Another limitation of AO is that it requires a bright star to guide on - although lasers are becoming available. Mind you, the laser stuff seems to have even worse issues with calibration. Finally, AO has a very limited effective field of view; you can only correct over a small patch at a time. It makes it hard to do wide-field surveys that way.

    Sooo, the upshot is that you need both, and will continue to need bothy for a long time. That being said, I wish the GMT guys lots of luck.

    --
    Human genome = 3 billion base pairs = 6 GBit. Windows + Office = 20 Gbit. Which is more impressive?
    1. Re:somethiing to keep in mind by sean.geek.nz · · Score: 1

      You're attacking a straw man by by claiming people "keep saying this is just as good as Hubble at 1/10 the cost".

      What they're saying is that this is BETTER THAN Hubble at MANY THINGS at 1/10th the cost.

      Not better at everything (UV absorbtion by the atmosphere, for example, is just a killer for ground-based UV on some wavelengths). But ten times the resolution of Hubble is nothing to sneeze at.

      And the people saying this are responding to a naive horde who keep saying "but why not spend money on Hubble instead coz its out of the atmosphere". Hubble does have unique advantages, and being is space is very cool, but given its horrificly large cost its very hard to justify Hubble in terms of bang per buck.

    2. Re:somethiing to keep in mind by antispam_ben · · Score: 1

      but given its horrificly large cost its very hard to justify Hubble in terms of bang per buck.

      That must be why NASA has released so many (highly processed and beautified, but why not?) pics from Hubble, to keep it in the public's eye and have Congress support it. The news media have to have gone along with this, because there are so many dramatic pics available from Earth-based telescopes, even from amateurs with small aperture (relative to the VLT's and such) scopes.

      --
      Tag lost or not installed.
    3. Re:somethiing to keep in mind by RayBender · · Score: 1
      What they're saying is that this is BETTER THAN Hubble at MANY THINGS at 1/10th the cost. [...] But ten times the resolution of Hubble is nothing to sneeze at.

      And I'm saying that in one area where it is often claimed to be better (angular resolution), it isn't actually better. Adaptive optcs doesn't correct for all the atmospheric blurring, and it only works well in the near-IR. Even there is doesn't recover more than about 70% of the light compared to a perfect image. GMT would only have ten times the resolution of HST if adaptive optics worked at visible wavelengths. And again, the real metric isn't just resolution, it's "Strehl ratio", which is basically the fraction of light recovered into a perfect image.

      Where GMT is unquestionably better is in collecting area - but no-one has argued that some projects don't need light-buckets. They clearly do. But not every project needs a light bucket - hence the need for HST.

      --
      Human genome = 3 billion base pairs = 6 GBit. Windows + Office = 20 Gbit. Which is more impressive?
  43. Wasp & /Bee Hives by antdude · · Score: 1

    Heh, those photographs remind me of bee and wasp nests. :)

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  44. amazing ...but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    everything seems to get bigger and bigger
    now-a-days. those circles in the parking lot are
    very impressive indeed. but /me thinks it's time
    for some serious science. i mean all this just
    scaling up things isn't going to work for ever you
    know, the diameter of the earth is only so big :P
    is there no other way to do optical astronomy
    with some neat-o physcis witout having to scale?
    i mean we have CCDs, LCDs, super fluid liquids and
    what else etc.
    i'm sure there's a way to get that resolution
    without having to confuse people trying to park
    their car ...
    after all this project is based on optical physics
    established .. what ... 200 years ago?
    scaling is a job for engineers?

  45. Re:Great ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, you want a microscope for that, not a telescope.