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1. It isn't going to fall out of the sky, yet. It should be good
for a few more years. 2. It is now outdated. Current technology allows ground-based instruments to exceed Hubble in terms of magnitude grasp and detail capture, thanks to adaptive optics and other technologies. 3. Hubble's much large successor should be the "next big thing" but the rapid advance of Earth-based telescope size/technology may exceed the new, larger Hubble before it gets into orbit. -Rich |
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I agree. The problem is that the public doesn't see the "great
pictures" made by ground observatories because they are busy doing science. Perhaps beautiful shots of the Ring Nebula and subsequent public release isn't necessarily the best use of observing time and limited reseach dollars? But, yes, I too love such pictures. I only wonder if the public outcry will be so great when each of the other NASA Great Observatories reach end of life. The Hubble has been/is great, wonderful and all that. But reasonable people in places of authority have decided that the possible cost in lives and dollars for another servicing mission is not justified. --- Michael McCulloch |
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I agree. The problem is that the public doesn't see the "great
pictures" made by ground observatories because they are busy doing science. Perhaps beautiful shots of the Ring Nebula and subsequent public release isn't necessarily the best use of observing time and limited reseach dollars? But, yes, I too love such pictures. I only wonder if the public outcry will be so great when each of the other NASA Great Observatories reach end of life. The Hubble has been/is great, wonderful and all that. But reasonable people in places of authority have decided that the possible cost in lives and dollars for another servicing mission is not justified. --- Michael McCulloch |
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On 9 Feb 2004 16:16:23 -0800, Richard wrote:
1. It isn't going to fall out of the sky, yet. It should be good for a few more years. 2. It is now outdated. Current technology allows ground-based instruments to exceed Hubble in terms of magnitude grasp and detail capture, thanks to adaptive optics and other technologies. So I keep hearing, but can anyone post a link to some pictures demonstrating this? 3. Hubble's much large successor should be the "next big thing" but the rapid advance of Earth-based telescope size/technology may exceed the new, larger Hubble before it gets into orbit. I don't see how that could be, because the James Webb telescope will be observing in the near infrared, much of which is completely absorbed by the atmosphere. -- - Mike Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail. |
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On 9 Feb 2004 16:16:23 -0800, Richard wrote:
1. It isn't going to fall out of the sky, yet. It should be good for a few more years. 2. It is now outdated. Current technology allows ground-based instruments to exceed Hubble in terms of magnitude grasp and detail capture, thanks to adaptive optics and other technologies. So I keep hearing, but can anyone post a link to some pictures demonstrating this? 3. Hubble's much large successor should be the "next big thing" but the rapid advance of Earth-based telescope size/technology may exceed the new, larger Hubble before it gets into orbit. I don't see how that could be, because the James Webb telescope will be observing in the near infrared, much of which is completely absorbed by the atmosphere. -- - Mike Remove 'spambegone.net' and reverse to send e-mail. |
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![]() "Mike Ruskai" wrote in message .earthlink.net... On 9 Feb 2004 16:16:23 -0800, Richard wrote: 1. It isn't going to fall out of the sky, yet. It should be good for a few more years. 2. It is now outdated. Current technology allows ground-based instruments to exceed Hubble in terms of magnitude grasp and detail capture, thanks to adaptive optics and other technologies. So I keep hearing, but can anyone post a link to some pictures demonstrating this? Real Soon Now? Lets have a shootout: best Pillars of Creation wins. Until the groundlings best it, forget pigs-in-a-poke and keep Hubble and the Shuttle. We must destroy the current space effort to save it? Joe |
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![]() "Mike Ruskai" wrote in message .earthlink.net... On 9 Feb 2004 16:16:23 -0800, Richard wrote: 1. It isn't going to fall out of the sky, yet. It should be good for a few more years. 2. It is now outdated. Current technology allows ground-based instruments to exceed Hubble in terms of magnitude grasp and detail capture, thanks to adaptive optics and other technologies. So I keep hearing, but can anyone post a link to some pictures demonstrating this? Real Soon Now? Lets have a shootout: best Pillars of Creation wins. Until the groundlings best it, forget pigs-in-a-poke and keep Hubble and the Shuttle. We must destroy the current space effort to save it? Joe |
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On 02/10/04 09:52 +0900, Michael McCulloch wrote:
I agree. The problem is that the public doesn't see the "great pictures" made by ground observatories because they are busy doing science. The difference is that private observatories don't necessarily have the mandate -- or resources -- for public outreach. The Hubble project definitely does. Certainly, however, pro images not taken by Hubble are out there for those who are interested in finding them. I only wonder if the public outcry will be so great when each of the other NASA Great Observatories reach end of life. Perhaps, but such matters only count if the observatory is in an orbit that is reachable for maintenance of the spacecraft. For the JWST, that will definitely not be the case. The Hubble has been/is great, wonderful and all that. But reasonable people in places of authority have decided that the possible cost in lives and dollars for another servicing mission is not justified. Hmmm. I'm sure no James Oberg, but given the science potential of an upgraded Hubble versus tens of flights to complete the ISS, I'd say that argument is paper thin. There's a lot of great science left in the Hubble and I'd say that a servicing mission is money well spent. IMO, YMMV and all that. trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. |
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On 02/10/04 09:52 +0900, Michael McCulloch wrote:
I agree. The problem is that the public doesn't see the "great pictures" made by ground observatories because they are busy doing science. The difference is that private observatories don't necessarily have the mandate -- or resources -- for public outreach. The Hubble project definitely does. Certainly, however, pro images not taken by Hubble are out there for those who are interested in finding them. I only wonder if the public outcry will be so great when each of the other NASA Great Observatories reach end of life. Perhaps, but such matters only count if the observatory is in an orbit that is reachable for maintenance of the spacecraft. For the JWST, that will definitely not be the case. The Hubble has been/is great, wonderful and all that. But reasonable people in places of authority have decided that the possible cost in lives and dollars for another servicing mission is not justified. Hmmm. I'm sure no James Oberg, but given the science potential of an upgraded Hubble versus tens of flights to complete the ISS, I'd say that argument is paper thin. There's a lot of great science left in the Hubble and I'd say that a servicing mission is money well spent. IMO, YMMV and all that. trane -- //------------------------------------------------------------ // Trane Francks Tokyo, Japan // Practice random kindness and senseless acts of beauty. |
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On 9 Feb 2004 16:16:23 -0800, Richard wrote:
2. It is now outdated. Current technology allows ground-based instruments to exceed Hubble in terms of magnitude grasp and detail capture, thanks to adaptive optics and other technologies. While those particular points are true, it's not the whole story, and the conclusion that Hubble is outdated is false. I've posted on this in two other threads recently. Here it is again: The resolution of HST has been surpassed from the ground at optical wavelengths but that's just a part of the comparison. AO works only over a very small field, still requires good atmospheric conditions and requires a suitable guide star very nearby (or an artificial one, which has so far proved elusive). It also doesn't work through clouds, and observing in optical is limited to the daytime. Considering all of the factors involved in the comparison of space- and ground-based telescopes, I wouldn't say Hubble has been surpassed by AO, or that it is likely to be surpassed in the next few years even with the advances like multi-conjugate AO and tomography. OTOH, I wouldn't say Hubble is better than an AO-equipped 10-meter telescope, either. I think they're just different tools. See the FAQ on the Mount Wilson Observatory web site for more information: www.mtwilson.edu Mike Simmons |
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