Engineering the 30-Meter Telescope
yyzmcleod writes "When completed in 2018, the Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT) will be the world's largest and most powerful, with a resolving power 100 times that of Hubble. As TMT's preliminary design review nears, this article details how its enclosure, segmented mirror and adaptive optics will work to let astronomers peer back to the beginning of the Cosmos."
"World's largest and most powerful".
Yeah, except for the 42-m E-ELT, also slated for 2018-ish. And that's still excluding radio telescopes...
As the actual article notes on its first page, TMT will have roughly 100 times the collecting area of Hubble: this goes as the square of the diameter of the telescope, so with TMT = 30m and Hubble = 2.5m, that's about right.
Resolving power (if the TMT can be made diffraction-limited, which it is aiming to do, but which is hard nevertheless) gets better linearly with the diameter, so TMT will have roughly 10 times the resolving power of Hubble.
The more appropriate space-based comparison in 2018 will be JWST which has a diameter of 6.5m, although JWST and ground-based ELTs are more properly thought of as being complementary, not competitive: they do different things.
But as already noted, the more appropriate comparison is with the European E-ELT which is under Phase B study now and is baselined for 42m diameter.
More interesting is where the TMT and E-ELT will be located: same hemisphere or not? Current bets are on E-ELT being in Chile, with TMT possibly going to Mauna Kea. This would be a better outcome for us astronomers than having both in the south, IMHO.