DARPA's New Hi-Tech Telescope
coondoggie writes "You can bet that if there are little red aliens running around on Mars, or spaceships patrolling other planets in our solar system for that matter, a recently powered-up telescope built by researchers at the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency might just be able to see them. The Air Force, which operates the DARPA-developed Space Surveillance Telescope says the telescope's design, featuring unique image-capturing technology known as a curved charge coupled device system, as well as very wide field-of-view, large-aperture optics, doesn't require the long optics train of a more traditional telescopes."
Yeah, it's for looking out into space. Yeeah... that's the ticket.
Will this be exclusive to Men in Black or will scientists be able to use this wonder as well?
Tired of my customary (Score:1)
Curved Charged Coupled Device? Wouldn't that be CCCD?
Kwisatz Haderach
Sell the spice to CHOAM
This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
You can bet that if there are little red aliens running around on Mars...
You're joking, right? That telescope is going to be pointed at little humans of all colors running around on Earth.
Proverbs 21:19
Would this telescope find pieces of apollo on the moon? Jamie and Adam's interview on Colbert Report claims that modern telescopes arent capable of seeing the debris on the moon. I know they're taking a jab at the US faking a moon landing, but im still curious
Does this mean we can point the thing at the moon where we previously landed and finally get pictures of the lander so all those "we didn't go to the moon!" crazies will finally be quiet?
3.5M @ f/1.0 - holy shit!!!
The press release is a little breathless. Astronomers have been using CCDs for 20 years now.
Watching for debris in low earth orbit? Sounds a lot like watching for civilians in the streets! ITS THE NWO!
When they can make these curved sensors cheap, it will mean I'll have to buy a whole new set of lenses for the new breed of DSLR cameras. Doh!
http://www.ptbmagazine.com/content/040103_ora.html
The purpose of this telescope is fast scanning of large areas, not fine detail on single distant objects. By invoking red (!) LGMs, the FA author is just doing a poor job at sensationalizing something he doesn't understand (just the sort of vacuous hype we get too much of here).
Telescopes from Earth can't but those in orbit around the Moon can and have photographed the Apollo landing sites in enough detail to show the landers, the equipment left behind and the astronauts foot prints.
Undetectable Steganography? Yep, there's an app fo
Sounds like a replacement for GEODSS.
GEODSS, from 1980, was the first fully computerized telescope system. It basically looks at the sky, section by section, subtracts out all known objects, and reports the rest. So it finds new satellites, space junk, and even dark objects that occult stars. Three GEODSS sites are still running; a fourth is loaned out to Lincoln Labs to find and track near-Earth asteroids. (Somewhat to the annoyance of astronomers who had been discovering comets and asteroids manually, the automated Lincoln Labs GEODSS discovered them by the thousands.) Each site has at least two identical telescopes, and some have a wide-angle Schmidt.
One of the less-often mentioned features of GEODSS is that it can illuminate a target. One telescope can be used to aim a laser at an object in low orbit, to get a clear picture of darker objects.
little red aliens running around on Mars
So they've already dis-proven that the men from Mars are green. That makes more sense as green sure does contrast against the red planet. I'd say this telescope has already proven its worth.
It's only on the ground (for testing) until the next time the X-37B launches.
This would essentially be a breakthrough in optics not only on a theoretical front, but actually building, not merely a proof of concept, but an operational model is a rare and perhaps a first ever occurrence in science & technology (compacting several generations of knowledge evolution).
DARPA itself is not really gifted to be able to effect this kind of progress.
But the clearest sign this is crap is that it is scooped by some nerd on "network world"? No offense but the most advanced optics this guy has ever seen is the multi-color fiber optics mobile curio on his computer desk.
doesn't require the long optics train of a more traditional telescopes....
The system is an f/1.0 optical design
doesn't require the long optics, but then it coughs up a f-number.
Isn't this the scientific equivalent of sucking and blowing at the same time?
That after studying astronomy at university and spending the past 10 years as an amateur astronomer the scope will not be able to see the apollo gear left on the moon. 3.5m at F1? Not a chance. So the author is really stretching it to suggest it will see theoretical aliens on Mars. Perhaps if the Aliens were a significant fraction of the size of Mars it could :)
As for all of the sane things mentioned in TFA (watching things in orbit). Sure- no problem.
Not if they're running around in another dimension.
Mod Me Up. You'll make a grown man cry.
Looking at this rendering of the design, my first reaction is: how the hell can it see anything with that enormous chunk in the middle? Is that the secondary reflector? Or is that where the curved CCD will be housed (obviating the need for a secondary: it would be the secondary). And there's an awful lot of superstructure to hold that thing in place: won't that also obscure the field of view?
Any optics experts want to field this one?
Maui Space Surveillance Site (AMOS) would be my guess.
I am very small, utmostly microscopic.
Run the damn ball you idiots don't stand there lookin' at it => let's go! Solar Focusing has been achieved. Back yards and front yards and side yards and the neighbor's yard would like to place an order for the DARPA Mini-Solars immediately, and send me my Royalty checks pleez deposit to: bank account number 162895. I'll only ask 1%, this time. Next time I play Hard Ball => 1.1%. Don't mess with me. I'm dangerous, radioactive, on fire, blazing saddles look out.