Massive Construction Effort Begins For World's Largest Telescope
An anonymous reader writes with this selection from a press release issued by the Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics: "Astronomers have begun to blast 3 million cubic feet of rock from a mountaintop in the Chilean Andes to make room for what will be the world's largest telescope when completed near the end of the decade. The telescope will be located at the Carnegie Institution's Las Campanas Observatory-one of the world's premier astronomical sites, known for its pristine conditions and clear, dark skies. Over the next few months, more than 70 controlled blasts will break up the rock while leaving a solid bedrock foundation for the telescope and its precision scientific instruments."
It seems whenever I read an article about something new and great discovered by a telescope, it mentions one of the orbiting sattelite type telescopes.
I can't remember when I last heard from a ground based one, except for routine things as continuously sweeping certain areas of the sky for anomalies, like a space surveillance camera.
Now I don't follow astronomy closely, so my viewpoint is based on what of it gets through to general science news sites.
But are huge investments in ground based telescopes like this still worth it compared to the alternative?
and only if, it's completed before the (larger) Thirty Meter Telescope in Hawaii, and the (larger still) European Extremely Large Telescope in Chile.
And even if it is completed before TMT and E-ELT, as soon as either of them is completed, it'll lose the title.
Did I mention both TMT and E-ELT are also targeting completion by the end of the decade? Yup.
So, good luck, GMT!
(And it goes without saying that non-optical radio telescopes, which use dishes instead of mirrors, have long been much larger. And that even submillimeter telescopes, which also use dishes, are working on staying larger, with the 25-meter CCAT planned for Chile later this decade.)
Village idiot in some extremely smart villages.
Astronomers have begun to blast 3 million cubic feet of rock
I think you'll find that the people blasting rock aren't astronomers...
I spent five minutes stealing cool sigs and all I got was this.
Astronomers have begun to blast 3 million cubic feet of rock from a mountaintop
..and not only are they avid earth movers, in their spare time Astronomers are also fantastic landscape gardeners.. ..mind the shrubbery...
Besides knowing the depths of the space, they are also construction workers.
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And here's me thinking they were going to blow stuff up at random in the hope a telescope would come out of it.
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As we have learned from Mythbusters, it just isn't science unless you blow something up at some point!
This is hardly the largest telescope being built. At seven 8.5m mirrors, it is equivalent of a 22m telescope. Just last week I was using the Parkes 64m telescope which was build 50 years ago (and it is hardly the biggest telescope in the world).
Oh did they mean largest optical telescope....
There's the Very Large Optical Telescope, then there's the Overwhelmingly Large Telescope and the European Extremely Large Telescope. What's next? Ridiculously Large Telescope?
Will no one think of the mountains? These ancient citizens of the planet, taking millions of years to form, just minding their own business, and we arrogant humans go and blow the top off of them. Honestly, it's just rude.
I have a question: how come no one has considered using a spot on Australia's Nullarbor Plain to build a giant telescope? Like Chile's Atacama Desert, the Nullarbor Plain has just about no rain and has effective freedom from light pollution, so it would be perfect for a large optical telescope installation.
Wasn't a better approach to building telescopes to have multiple smaller ones working in conjunction, spread out across acres of land (or more) ?
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Why are there not any environmental organizations protesting this destruction of mountain habitat.
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Putting high precision instruments and a big piece of glass in a country that is very prone to earthquakes doesn't seem to be a good idea to me...
when i actually payed a bunch of people to pay another bunch of people to build it.
Duck people! Astronomers are going to blast something, they are not taking any advice from explosion specialists.
by the much larger E-ELT http://www.eso.org/public/teles-instr/e-elt.html
"begun to blast 3 million cubic feet of rock"
Let's be nice to Whitney Houston's memory.
...who set off bombs to kill & damage people: here's something useful you might think about doing instead.