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by ubertakter
2342 days ago
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Yeah. Depending on the spectrum, the telescope might need to be really big. Not to mention at the moment a telescope in orbit would hard, if not impossible, to service. Perhaps a review of telescope design is in order:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telescope
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optical_telescope Building large telescopes is hard enough. Putting them in orbit just adds to all the costs. Look at the James Webb Telescope (which still hasn't been launched).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_Webb_Space_Telescope It seems possible to launch multiple small telescopes and operate them as one large scope using aperture synthesis. I don't know if there are any existing designs or plans for this. Also: somewhat ninja'd, see other replies as well. |
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We know how to do that in radio (VLBI), have some experience in IR (ALMA), are doing research on how to do that in optical. But in practice that is much harder than you think. The relative distances of the telescopes have to be known and constant to within a few fractions of the wavelength you are using. Hard when you are using centimeter radiowaves, insanely hard with optical light that has 600 nanometers wavelength.