Help - Search - Members - Calendar
Full Version: Plan to build giant liquid telescope on Moon
Unexplained Mysteries Discussion Forums > News, Media & World Events > Main Front Page News
UM-Bot
user posted image rEven by astronomical standards, Roger Angel thinks big. Angel, a leading astronomer at the University of Arizona, is proposing an enormous liquid-mirror telescope on the moon that could be hundreds of times more sensitive than the Hubble Space Telescope.Using a rotating dish of reflective liquid as its primary mirror, Angel's telescope would the largest ever built, and would permit astronomers to study the oldest and most distant objects in the universe, including the very first stars."It's an idea that's been around, and we decided to flesh it out," Angel says.Angel, a member of the National Academy of Sciences, a MacArthur Fellow and a Fellow of the Royal Society, is currently concluding a study to determine the feasibility of constructing a lunar liquid mirror telescope, or LMT, for NASA Institute for Advanced Concepts, an NASA-funded space think tank.LMT's have been built on Earth -- the Large Zenith Telescope in British Columbia is the third largest telescope in North America -- but the moon's low gravity and lack of atmosphere would allow for a truly gigantic instrument.

Angel dreams of a 100-meter mirror, which would be larger than two side-by-side football fields and would collect 1,736 times more light than the Hubble.Even a 20-meter instrument, which is more likely in the near term, would be 70 times more sensitive than the Hubble and could detect objects 100 times fainter than those that will be seen with the James Webb Space Telescope, a next-generation orbiting observatory scheduled for launch in 2013."At first, it sort of sounds like a crazy idea," says Paul Hickson of the University of British Columbia, one of two Canadian LMT experts who collaborated with Angel on the study. "But when you go through it in some detail, you realize it could actually work."NIAC director Bob Cassanova agrees. "It's quite feasible," he says. "The debate about this is about some of the details."

linked-image View: Full Article | Source: Wired
Ghost Ship
Awesome. Hubbles amazing view would pale greatly in comparison to the view from a 100 meter mirror.

QUOTE
Angel dreams of a 100-meter mirror, which would be larger than two side-by-side football fields and would collect 1,736 times more light than the Hubble


Imagine what could be seen? Maybe new objects in the universe could be detected. Maybe there were objects in the earlier universe but not here in our present universe. What i like most about these high power telescopes is their ability to go see backwords through time.
:PsYKoTiC:BeHAvIoR:
QUOTE(Dark_Ambient @ May 25 2007, 09:47 AM) [snapback]1693463[/snapback]
Awesome. Hubbles amazing view would pale greatly in comparison to the view from a 100 meter mirror.
Imagine what could be seen? Maybe new objects in the universe could be detected. Maybe there were objects in the earlier universe but not here in our present universe. What i like most about these high power telescopes is their ability to go see backwords through time.


Wow. That would be impressive to use. If this project comes to fruitation in the next, I don't know, 10 - 15 years from now, will it be controlled from a remote site, or will there be actually people onsite on the moon I wonder?
Shuriken
QUOTE
What i like most about these high power telescopes is their ability to go see backwards through time.

actually u can see "backwards through time" also with an ordinary telescope... And with ur own eyes for that metter... original.gif
Legatus Legionis
QUOTE(Shuriken @ May 26 2007, 02:25 AM) [snapback]1693892[/snapback]
actually u can see "backwards through time" also with an ordinary telescope... And with ur own eyes for that metter... original.gif

i agree. definitely agree. so the newly discovered planet which was 20.5 ly away is it's past image.
ships-cat
A 100m reflector telescope ? Ye gods - that WOULD be interesting.

Mind you, making a 100m-wide reflective puddle will be expensive...

We might have to 'pool' our resources grin2.gif

But it would be worth it. No more paddling in the shallow end of astronomy. tongue.gif

Meow Purr.
Natasha Twist
You wouldn't be able to see this from Earth, right?
Red Project
It would be cool if they called it "The Angel" or "Angel Eyes".
mfrmboy
I wonder if they would be able to zoom in on planets enough to see if there are any life forms or structures present.
ships-cat
QUOTE(Natasha Twist @ May 25 2007, 09:33 PM) [snapback]1694057[/snapback]
You wouldn't be able to see this from Earth, right?

Hee hee - are you thinking what I'm thinking Natasha' .. survelilance satelite ? Nah - I'm guessing this would be on the dark side of the moon, pointing 'outwards'.. otherwise there would be little point building it.

Meow Purr.
SureFire
Interesting, but that's a massive structure... What do they intend on doing when meteorites crash into things, I understand its liquid but it has to be covered right? And if it cracks?
This is a "lo-fi" version of our main content. To view the full version with more information, formatting and images, please click here.
Invision Power Board © 2001-2008 Invision Power Services, Inc.