Hubble Origins Probe: Better than a servicing mission
Hubble Origins Probe: Better than a servicing mission
http://www.pha.jhu.edu/hop/
How can they say no?
A brand new Hubble telescope launched for the price of the servicing mission on the old one without the problem of fast approaching window of repair or risks and using the parts they were going to use (or scrap) for the repair mission.
How can they say no?
A brand new Hubble telescope launched for the price of the servicing mission on the old one without the problem of fast approaching window of repair or risks and using the parts they were going to use (or scrap) for the repair mission.
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They can easily say no. Doesn't the US congress need to approve the money?
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They plan to put a new one up Trans. It's just the delay between the Hubble's death and the new one that is the problem. I personally think there should be more optical space telescopes up there.
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Have you heard of this new mirror being built for a huge earth-based telescope? It's going to work like a pair of binoculars, apparently, which will improve accuracy and clarity of picture. I hear the glass lenses are so polished and flat that their edges deviate by only 1/1000th the diameter of a human hair. That's pretty fucking flat.
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http://medusa.as.arizona.edu/lbto/
You're thinking of this right? My computer crashed before I could post it.
You're thinking of this right? My computer crashed before I could post it.
Yeah but with it being on Earth won't that kinda spoil the photo?Transient wrote:Have you heard of this new mirror being built for a huge earth-based telescope? It's going to work like a pair of binoculars, apparently, which will improve accuracy and clarity of picture. I hear the glass lenses are so polished and flat that their edges deviate by only 1/1000th the diameter of a human hair. That's pretty fucking flat.
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They can compensate for the atmospheric effects relatively well.o'dium wrote:Yeah but with it being on Earth won't that kinda spoil the photo?Transient wrote:Have you heard of this new mirror being built for a huge earth-based telescope? It's going to work like a pair of binoculars, apparently, which will improve accuracy and clarity of picture. I hear the glass lenses are so polished and flat that their edges deviate by only 1/1000th the diameter of a human hair. That's pretty fucking flat.
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James Webb Space telescope? That's still many years away (scheduled for 2014).
Yes we will be able to directly see planets around other suns, but it may take a decade or more.
Yes we will be able to directly see planets around other suns, but it may take a decade or more.
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Definitely not. This telescope is going to be many times stronger than even Hubble, not to mention there are ways to get around the interference from our atmosphere.o'dium wrote:Yeah but with it being on Earth won't that kinda spoil the photo?Transient wrote:Have you heard of this new mirror being built for a huge earth-based telescope? It's going to work like a pair of binoculars, apparently, which will improve accuracy and clarity of picture. I hear the glass lenses are so polished and flat that their edges deviate by only 1/1000th the diameter of a human hair. That's pretty fucking flat.
It will at least get infrared, but the degree of precision they can get from the visible spectrum is really incredible.dzjepp wrote:This only gonna pick up the visible spectrum?