SPACE DAILY SPACE WAR TERRA DAILY MARS DAILY SPACE MART SPACE TRAVEL GPS DAILY ENERGY DAILY
  24/7 Space News  

Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
  
Search All Our Sites at SpaceBank
Liquid Mirror Telescopes On The Moon

An artist's concept of a spinning liquid mirror telescope on the Moon. Credit: Univ. of British Columbia.
by Trudy E. Bell
Science@NASA
Huntsville AL (SPX) Oct 10, 2008
A team of internationally renowned astronomers and opticians may have found a way to make "unbelievably large" telescopes on the Moon. "It's so simple," says Ermanno F. Borra, physics professor at the Optics Laboratory of Laval University in Quebec, Canada.

"Isaac Newton knew that any liquid, if put into a shallow container and set spinning, naturally assumes a parabolic shape-the same shape needed by a telescope mirror to bring starlight to a focus. This could be the key to making a giant lunar observatory."

Borra, who has been studying liquid-mirror telescopes since 1992, and Simon P. "Pete" Worden, now director of NASA Ames Research Center, are members of a team taking the idea for a spin.

On Earth, a liquid mirror can be made quite smooth and perfect if it its container is kept exactly horizontal and rests on a low-vibration low-friction air bearing that is spun by a synchronous motor having one stable speed.

"It doesn't need to spin very fast," says Borra. "The rim of a 4-meter-diameter mirror-the largest I've made in my lab-travels only 3 miles per hour, about the speed of a brisk walk. In the low gravity of the Moon, it would spin even slower."

Most liquid-mirror telescopes on Earth have used mercury. Mercury remains molten at room temperature, and it reflects about 75 percent of incoming light, almost as good as silver.

The biggest liquid-mirror telescope on Earth, the Large Zenith Telescope operated by the University of British Columbia in Canada, is 6 meters across-a diameter 20 percent larger than the famous 200-inch mirror of the Hale telescope at Palomar Observatory in California.

Yet when completed in 2005, the Canadian Palomar-class liquid-mirror telescope cost less than $1 million to build-only a few percent the cost of a solid-mirror telescope of the same diameter--and, for that matter, only a sixth of Palomar's original cost in 1948.

Those economics are making astronomers sit up and begin noodling out plans for a lunar observatory.

"Our study [with Borra] started when I was still an astronomy professor at the University of Arizona before I came to NASA in 2006," Worden recalls. "The real appeal of this approach is that we could get an unbelievably large telescope on the Moon."

Mercury is unworkable on the Moon: it's very dense and thus heavy to launch, it's very expensive, and it would evaporate quickly when exposed to the lunar vacuum. In recent years, however, Borra and his colleagues have been experimenting with a class of organic compounds known as ionic liquids. "Ionic liquids are basically molten salts," Borra explains.

"Their evaporation rate is almost zero, so they would not vaporize in the lunar vacuum. They can also remain liquid at very low temperatures." He and his colleagues are now seeking to synthesize ionic liquids that remain molten even at liquid-nitrogen temperatures.

Much less dense than mercury, ionic liquids are only slightly denser than water. Although not highly reflective themselves, a spinning mirror of an ionic liquid can be coated with an ultrathin layer of silver just as if it were a solid mirror.

Weirdest of all, the silver layer is so thin-only 50 to 100 nanometers-that it actually solidifies. In the vacuum of space, a liquid mirror coated with a thin solid layer of silver would neither evaporate nor tarnish.

A liquid mirror can't be tilted away from the horizontal because the fluid would pour out, destroying the mirror. But that does not mean a liquid mirror telescope cannot be pointed.

Optical designers are now experimenting with ways of electromechanically warping secondary mirrors suspended above a liquid mirror-or even slightly warping the liquid mirror itself-to aim at angles away from the vertical. Similar techniques are used to point the great Arecibo radio telescope in Puerto Rico.

Furthermore, says Borra, "if the telescope is located anywhere other than exactly at the poles, with each rotation of Earth or Moon it would scan a circular strip of sky. And the rotational axis of the Moon wobbles with a period of 18.6 years; so over a period of 18.6 years, the telescope would actually look at a good-sized region of the sky."

Locating a major liquid-mirror telescope near the lunar poles is appealing. The telescope itself could reside near the bottom of a permanently shadowed crater where it would stay at cryogenic temperatures, desirable for the best infrared astronomy. Yet solar panels could be erected on nearby permanently illuminated mountain peaks to generate power to keep the mirror spinning.

The fact that a liquid-mirror telescope always looks straight up vastly simplifies its construction and reduces mass by eliminating heavy mounts, gearing, and pointing-control systems needed for a steerable telescope.

"All you'd need is the liquid-mirror container, which might be an umbrella-like device that self-deploys, plus a nearly frictionless superconducting bearing and its drive motor," Borra says. Worden estimates that all the materials for an entire lunar telescope 20 meters across would be "only a few tons, which could be boosted to the Moon in a single Ares 5 mission in the 2020s."

Future telescopes might have mirrors as large as 100 meters in diameter-larger than a football field.

"A mirror that large could peer back in time to when the universe was very young, only half a billion years old, when the first generation of stars and galaxies were forming," Borra exclaimed. "Potentially more exciting is pure serendipity: new things we might discover that we just don't expect."

Says Worden: "Putting a giant telescope on the Moon has always been an idea of science fiction, but it soon could become fact."

Community
Email This Article
Comment On This Article

Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Science@NASA
Space Telescope News and Technology at Skynightly.com


Keck Telescope And "Cosmic Lens" Demonstrate Future Telescope
Pasadena CA (SPX) Oct 09, 2008
Astronomers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) and their colleagues used a rare cosmic alignment and modern adaptive optics to image a distant galaxy with similar exquisite resolution promised by the future Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT).






Memory Foam Mattress Review

Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
  • First Second Generation Astronaut Pays Own Fare To Station
  • NASA Selects ITT For Space Communications Network Services
  • Intermediate eXperimental Vehicle
  • Spinoff 2008 Highlights NASA Innovations In Everyday Life

  • NASA plans Mars launch next fall
  • Phoenix Lander Digs And Analyzes Soil As Darkness Gathers
  • An Opportunity For A Tour Will Be An Endeavour
  • Nicaraguan Volcano Provides Insight Into Early Mars

  • New ASTRA 1M Satellite To Be Launched On 31 October
  • India To Have New Launchpad For Proposed Manned Mission
  • Ariane 5 Is Readied For A Dual-Payload Mission
  • Arianespace Flight 186 Set For End Of November

  • Maps Shed Light On CO2's Global Nature
  • 2008 Ozone Hole Larger Than Last Year
  • Smog Blog For Central America And Caribbean Debuts
  • Infoterra Enhances Capability With Acquisition Of Imass

  • Outer Solar System Not So Crowded
  • 1,000 Days On The Road To Pluto
  • NASA Spacecraft Ready To Explore Outer Solar System
  • Dawn Reaches It's First Anniversary

  • Massive Young Stars Trigger Stellar Birth
  • Cosmic Eye Sheds Light On Early Galaxy Formation
  • New Center For Chemistry Of The Universe
  • Big Galaxy Collisions Can Stunt Star Formation

  • Chandrayaan-1 Ready For First Indian Mission To Moon
  • Moon Mission Is Not Expensive, Says ISRO
  • AGI And X PRIZE Foundation Partner For Moon Prize
  • India to launch unmanned lunar mission this month

  • 2008 ESRI Homeland Security GIS Summit
  • Spatially Manage And Optimize Fleet Operations With ArcLogistics 9.3
  • RealEstate.com Launches RealEstate.com Mobile
  • TomTom Fuel Price Service Now Available At Retail

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2007 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement