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They've started pouring the glass for the first of the seven 8.4m
mirrors which will make up the Giant Magellan Telescope. The scope won't be finished till 2016, but I just love reading about big stuff, especially big scientific instruments. http://www.gmto.org/newsitems Tim -- Today's message was brought to you by Mary, Jane and a big number two. |
#2
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Very exciting project. I wonder if there are any projections about the
GMT's limiting magnitude (faintest source) detection capabilities? I'd imagine fainter than magnitude 30... which would be good for Earth-sized exoplanet searching. 2016 is still a long way off though. :-( AAI |
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![]() wrote: Very exciting project. I wonder if there are any projections about the GMT's limiting magnitude (faintest source) detection capabilities? I'd imagine fainter than magnitude 30... Light pollution notwithstanding, molecules in the Earth's atmosphere produce a natural skyglow. This means the record-holder for the deepest optical image will remain HST. which would be good for Earth-sized exoplanet searching. Yes, if the GMT was in orbit. 2016 is still a long way off though. :-( You won't have to wait until then. In the intervening 11 years, Kepler will have bagged hundreds of transiting Earths (if they indeed exist), SIM will study a select few and TPF/Darwin will have directly imaged some of them. |
#4
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"Tim Auton" wrote
They've started pouring the glass for the first of the seven 8.4m mirrors which will make up the Giant Magellan Telescope. The scope won't be finished till 2016, but I just love reading about big stuff, especially big scientific instruments. http://www.gmto.org/newsitems Specifically it's a glass melting, not a pouring. The glass melts while the furnace spins, and over time the spinning slows as the temperature is reduced. So far, it appears this has been a successful casting. Howard Lester |
#5
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But will it have goto?
Tim Auton wrote: They've started pouring the glass for the first of the seven 8.4m mirrors which will make up the Giant Magellan Telescope. The scope won't be finished till 2016, but I just love reading about big stuff, especially big scientific instruments. http://www.gmto.org/newsitems Tim |
#6
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On 2005-07-26, starburst wrote:
Tim Auton wrote: They've started pouring the glass for the first of the seven 8.4m mirrors which will make up the Giant Magellan Telescope. The scope won't be finished till 2016, but I just love reading about big stuff, especially big scientific instruments. http://www.gmto.org/newsitems But will it have goto? When they are that big they all have goto. -- The night is just the shadow of the Earth. |
#7
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Ed wrote:
wrote: Very exciting project. I wonder if there are any projections about the GMT's limiting magnitude (faintest source) detection capabilities? I'd imagine fainter than magnitude 30... Light pollution notwithstanding, molecules in the Earth's atmosphere produce a natural skyglow. This means the record-holder for the deepest optical image will remain HST. Interesting tidbit: the visible-light background from low Earth orbit isn't all _that_ dark, due to starlight scattered by dust (both zodiacal light and interstellar scattering). In the V band, HST's nighttime background (free of scattered Earthlight) is about half as bright as at the best ground-based sites. The comparison does become more favorable at other wavelengths - the blue and eventually UV orbital sky is extremely dark, and as one looks farther into the near-IR the gain becomes factors of thousands, as the airglow becomes brighter and brighter (and eventually not just airglow but the thermal radiation of the atmosphere dominates). For a particular wavelength, image quality, and aperture, one has to run the numbers to compare straight limiting magnitude (although the resolution advantage for faint objects will stay with HST for some time yet). [Yes, AO gives image cores tighter than HST from Keck or the VLT, especially in near-IR bands, but the wings on the image can still be very messy if you care about details of the structure of high-redshift galaxies.] Bill Keel |
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Ed wrote:
2016 is still a long way off though. :-( You won't have to wait until then. In the intervening 11 years, Kepler will have bagged hundreds of transiting Earths (if they indeed exist), SIM will study a select few and TPF/Darwin will have directly imaged some of them. Of course! I'd almost forgotten about all of those... AAI |
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