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Astronomers Plan Giant Telescopes
- __From__: Blade
- __Subject__: Astronomers Plan Giant Telescopes
- __Date__: Mon, 27 Oct 2003 05:51:16 -0600
Astronomers plan giant telescope
By Dr
David Whitehouse
BBC News Online science editor
A huge light-gathering area
US scientists have drawn up plans to build the largest telescope ever seen.
Its 30-metre-diameter mirror would be
almost 10 times as big as those in the Keck telescopes in Hawaii, currently the
world's largest observatories.
The Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation is funding a $17.5m
feasibility study and it could be ready for work by 2012.
Astronomers say the new telescope would allow a more detailed
look at distant stars and galaxies, and aid the search for planets beyond our
Solar System.
Impressive statistics
The optical and infrared telescope would be built with
adaptive optics, which will flex in a controlled manner to compensate for the
way the Earth's turbulent atmosphere distorts the light reaching the planet's
surface.
Ten times larger than anything before
The system
would result in images more than 12 times sharper than those from the Hubble
Space Telescope.
The new observatory will also have nine times the
light-gathering ability of one of the 10-metre Keck twin telescopes.
"Constructing and operating a telescope of this size will be a
huge undertaking requiring a large collaborative effort," says Richard Ellis,
director of optical observatories at the California Institute of Technology.
"The major goals of the design phase will include an extensive
review and optimisation of the telescope design, addressing areas of risk, for
example by early testing of key components, and staffing a project office in
Pasadena."
New horizons
Using such a large and powerful telescope, astrophysicists
will be able to study the formation of galaxies at the dawn of the cosmos, as
well as the processes which lead to young planetary systems around nearby stars.
"The key new capabilities promised by the Thirty Meter
Telescope will include a huge collecting area for studying the faintest sources,
which are often the most important to understand," says Chuck Steidel, Caltech
professor of astronomy.
Following the design study, the final phase of the project,
not yet funded, will be the construction of the observatory at a yet
undetermined site in Hawaii, Chile, or Mexico.
The old and the new
If all goes well, the
telescope could see its initial observations - first light - in 2012.
Ellis points out that Caltech has a history of building very
large optical telescopes.
They built the Keck twins in Hawaii and before that Caltech's
200-inch Hale Telescope at Palomar Observatory was the largest optical
instrument in the world.
Today, 54 years later it is still in continuous use as a major
research telescope.
"This project takes Caltech's success in ground-based
astronomy to the next level of ambition," Ellis says.
Other projects for huge telescopes are also in the pipeline.
There is a European Large Telescope project which plans a facility in South
America that would have a mirror measuring 100 metres in diameter.
- Astronomers Plan Giant Telescopes,
Blade