@@GerardvanBelle I love watching passionate, incredibly well-educated intelligent people communicate about their field of expertise and you're at the peak of anyone I've ever watched. I could watch you talk about this forever.
@@charleslivingston2256yeah I know. I guess it’s still a struggle. Scientist use 99.9 percent of brainpower on science stuff and only 0.01 on headsets. It’s only the really smart ones who manages to get a good headset.
Great interview, but I wish more info about problems with Lunar interferometer: small field of view compared to the cost, micrometeorites hitting mirrors, cosmic rays hitting light sensors, mechanic wear of movable parts that compensate different distance of primary mirrors to the star, dust covering mirrors.
The environment on the surface of the moon, aside from temperature, is very much like anywhere else in space. JWST gets about twice the micrometeorites than you would on the moon, because there's no moon blocking half the sky.
@Greenicegod Rate of cosmic rays is also reduced by half by the Moon. Any data about the rate of secondary micro/nano-meteorites? Without atmosphere and with lower gravity their range is long.
@@kamilZ2 no idea, but any secondary ejecta will be traveling less than 2.4km/s, the moon's escape velocity. That's an order of magnitude less than normal micrometeorites.
Fraser, that was an epic interview - He comes over as a really decent guy who just loves what he does and communicating that as clearly and precisely as possible - that is a man who deserves more interviews in the future.
When I was a teenager my mom did an internship at Lowell they were super friendly and inviting. They were all too willing to indulge a young kid interested in astronomy, I got to access a lot of areas most people didn't get to enter. It was kickass. The physics dept at NAU was also very inviting. Those psychos had a fuckin railgun in the basement. No reason just because. Awesome city to live in if you're trying to follow physics/cosmology/astronomy in general. Thank you for being so welcoming to a completely unqualified teenager such as myself!
Fraser, you are the best interviewer I know of in any field. On top of that it is such an exciting topic and Dr. van Belle is such a wonderful communicator, too. Thanks for your constantly exceptional work!
The advantage of 1 big expensive telescope vs lots of cheaper ones is it's safer, or it spreads the risk. I'm so pleased I'm in the JWST didn't explode universe.
My buddy just graduated with his PhD doing research on LISA, the jumbo interferometer that's going to detect gravitational waves. Proud of you, KuyGuy.
Seems like the perfect project for those 2 spare hubbles NASA has. Send them up one at a time, then send a crew up to connect them with rigid struts and an interferometer.
@@frasercain Just need to get some of the spares that are launched under those SpaceX DOD missions, and replace the firmware on them to get better long term stability, and also to be able to get long exposure times as opposed to the existing ultra short image times they use, plus turn the gyro units around so it points the other way, and add on some star finders, and a sun tracker to close the door when it is going to point too close to the sun.
@frasercain aren't the two telescopes already in space? when you reported they'd been given to Nasa it seemed as if they were no longer needed as spy satellites because better upgrades were now in use ? did you mention that they hadn't been launched, and I missed it?
@@denysvlasenko1865Hubble resolution in the x direction and 20 times Hubble resolution in the y direction can still be very useful. Many objects are point light sources like a double star. And several images taken with a rotated x,y axis can allow recreating an image with high resolution in both x and y directions.
Wow, thank you so much. I've been wondering the answers to all of the questions for years. Especially every amature putting a combined interferometer together and why we haven't done it. Man, i learned sooo much here. I cant begin to tell you how appreciative i am to you for this interview. Edit: I wrote above after a few minutes. Now I'm at the end and 😲 I'm floored.
Great interview. Good luck to Dr. Gerard in his great interferometer quest. It sounds very promising and very practical to build. Let's get this done..
I still can't believe that there's not a radio telescope made out of telescopes that are co-orbital with the Earth that has an effective aperture diameter of 2 au. It's 2024 for goodness sake. I also can't believe that the ISS crew in space aren't assembling giant space telescopes and truss structures to hold them in place. Like what are they even doing up there?
YOUR SIGNAL IS COMING IN LOUD AND CLEAR. WHICH BRINGS UP AN IMPORTANT QUESTION: HOW TO LEVERAGE THE POWER OF CATS TO IMPROVE WIDE APERTURE INTERFEROMETRY?
This was a great interview, I've also been obsessed with interferometers. I would love to build a small array of radio telescopes in my back yard even!
That was really fantastic. I hope to one day live through there being a large cluster of interferometer telescopes that can resolve details on other planets.
Fraser, for the interferometer, the conversation about the distance and the signal becoming fuzzy; if the ideal distance is 80meter, you can place a third one, etc, would that increase resolution or cover more angle; or maybe it is a choice of the telescope configuration, maybe even reconfigurable?
A third telescope would benefit as now you would have 3 pairs of telescopes and 3 fringes instead of 1. You also get a closure phase with 3 scopes which gives data regarding asymmetry of your target. Non-spherical stars and binary systems benefit from 3 scopes versus just 2.
What a fantastic idea! (2” mirrors on a cheap moon lander.) I’m confused on one thing though: He talked about the light being carried back over an optical fiber to be merged with that from the other mirror. You can funnel all the wavefront detail from the whole 2” mirror down through a single fiber? (Or if it’s a multi-fiber bundle, basically the same question: how do you maintain all the resolution of the wavefront data from the mirror?)
I suppose as long as you have enough fibers in the bundle to provide at least as much resolution as the separation allows, it won't be a problem. Optics aren't really my field and I was also wondering how fiber optics would impact the signal.
@@TheAlchaemist I thought that bouncing down the fiber distorted the optical signal, making each fiber mostly useful as the equivalent of a single pixel.
Fraser, i really appreciate your programs. One of the best space programs on the web. You have amazing access to insiders, and love the depth of your reporting. What year will we be able to image the surface of planets around Alpha Centauri?
Sounds like an excellent (test/dummy payload?) use of optimus to lay out 100 of them on about a (1km/100m?) grid on starship's first lunar landing? He's answering questions as I type...
This great video make me even more impatient about lunar missions by publicly traded / private startups., and self sustaining colony which is so feasible and so late. , We had one success this year. but Starship, in 2036? 8 refuels on that beast? they are delivering intuitive Machines Nova C on an F9, IM-1 was brought part way and it landed successfully, Im-2 got a huge contract, and others to do that and Optimus isn't part of the picture, nor do Starship CEO really care about the moon. we don't need androids with one hour batteries ,we need to put our boots on the ground of the Moon for a second habitat. . certain people have fans, but not friends to question what they are doing. they SpaceX spacesuits work, a private team paid for that mission themselves and people could go there on falcon 9s. i don't know why this Mars obsession .,. we can actually build a real starship if we were in the vacuum we'd could make so much progress. Love the SpaceX but they have too many unnecessary projects, and real investors on lunar colony startups suffer delays . The moon will give us that "multiplanetary" step, even if its a moon, its immunity and support to catastrophe that happens on earth.
Fascinating. So are the 'simple' pair of telescopes planned for the initial mission on the moon steerable? They have to track the target star together and still maintain nanometer accuracy?
I just read Thomas J. Kelly's (no relation) marvelous book "Moon Lander", and it mentioned the fact that the later missions placed not only seismographs on the Moon, but active seismic sources. The most intriguing to me was reference to mortars the astronauts set up, which, after their departure, launched rocket-propelled explosive charges to wide distances. Apollo, in effect, set up a seismic interferometer on the Moon, and that is how we have mapped its interior. Here's where to start: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Seismic_Profiling_Experiment
Interesting. Once peripherally in college was aware through a friend working in astronomy lab of their VLBI (very long baseline interferometry) calibration where the participating radio telescopes accessed by my alma mater, and others around the world, were both anchored to cartography points with laser measurements for very precise location registration and their signal timestamps synchronized with atomic clocks to make the signal data of the participating radio telescopes coherent in a way that their superposition was possible to contain the planetary size virtual radio telescope accuracy of measurement.
1:02:38 We do have quite a few pixels of Betelgeuse, though, unless I'm completely misunderstanding something. They've been viewing the irregularity of its disc since at least 2017, from ALMA at least, and those are not small discs on the images.
Formation flying is a lot easier if the birds are all connected together with fibers, and are charged up to a high static charge to repel one another and keep the fibers in tension. Probably you need a lightweight sunscreen as big as the whole array to keep ions in the solar wind from masking the fields. The sunscreen would also need to participate in the formation, and would act as a solar sail, so might best be a bit inboard of Earth's Lagrange point 2. (Sadly, Earth's shadow would not help there, as solar wind is not strictly radial.) Making the sunshade conical would minimize thrust, and be structurally more stable.
Jovian L2 interferometer: it's in permanent eclipse, so no worries about solar radiation and no difficulty cooling anything, nothing ever changes temperature or shape. Put a 40 kg RTG and 12 100 watt lasers (only use 1 at a time) on each mirror element, and there's your precision manuvering- photon momentum is plenty (1 m/s per year, or 4 days to do a 1 km manuver). No moving parts!
Fraser, I recall doing the calculations of resolving power. Put a range of hubble space telescopes around Earth orbit and connected up as an interferometer, and one could resolve street maps on some of the planets in nearbye star systems. Technically not achievable, various issues, including stability of orbits and refuelling. Also sensitivity is an issue here separate to resolution power. But fun calculations. Oh yeah and the analogue vs digital issue. (oops).
Construction in space (particularly on the moon) has another benefit for telescopes. Get a mold spinning, and a liquid in it (eg molten glass) will create a parabolic surface.
You can. Just take a telescope and mask the aperture with small open holes on opposite edges of the lens or mirror. Look at a bright star. The light interferes and under high magnification, you can see the dark lines of the interference in the airy disk.
The idea of measuring the the smallest thing ever - the plank length, using the biggest thing ever - millions of light years of quantum foam, is poetically beautiful - love it 00:29:46
Need to read up where the technology is at to have well separated interferometer telescopes, like for radio waves. Is it fundamentals of physics or better components needed? As soon as you realise a photon your interferometer doesn't work right? Quantum physics etc? He's talking about 100m fibre optic cable, not so bad, people would try his 2 inch concept on the ground, but in a building. Very educational.
Question. The Monday question thing. Everyone including here, talks about the "simulations" or "models" of the early universe, and then show a pretty graphic of the early universe. Every now and then I'd like to see what the scientists see from these models god dang it! Hank Hill reference, but pointing it out probably loses something.
Hi Fraser Great interview as usual :) I have a question. Would it be possible to digitally encode the images from each individual telescope is such a way as they could be combined at a later date?
It's not that simple, more like stuff from the double split experiment? Needing an undergraduate understanding after the first or second year of a course? Some speculation: if you can capture live holograms with the phase plane, and transfer this data, might get somewhere with these sensors.
It seems like timing is the single most critical element for planetary-surface levels of resolution. Lets go big: 1 meter at 100LY. To get this done, the collection optics would need to be a couple AU apart. Rather than relying upon quantum networks (which will be great once we actually have them) couldn't we simply capture images and then beam the data to a centrally located interferometry center in an out of band manner; to ensure phase alignment we would worry more about the time dilatation of the out of band transit operation rather than the actual collection event. This makes it a lot easier, it seems.
I don't get the idea of why we cannot combine many small optical telescopes together through ethernet. For the fit file, doesn't it have the timestamp? If the NTP time server is not accurate enough, the telescope can get the GPS clock instead. Thx @13:40 does the "coherent" means time? Nanometer tolerance? After photo stacking, the noise can be reduced a lot, right? Thx
i think for optical light you need somewhere in the region of femtosecond (10e-15) accurate timestamping (basically the wavelength divided by c, maybe even half that), GPS timestamps are accurate to about 130 nanoseconds on average (10e-9)... So there has to be an improvement of 8 orders of magnitude minimum to be useable. (basically you have to get the time of every wave of the light arriving, so you can match it to the very same Wave on the other Telesecope) Also GPS timestamp wasnt good enough for the EHT either, they have afaik used an own atomic clock at each location...
Hopefully version 2 of the concept is modular, and can plug in more as the need arises. Not exactly a space race, but knowing there's something good going on the moon will be making the ground telescope people work harder.
Space based interferometer array is obviously the ideal cost effective sequel to the JWST. The trade off is requiring more photon gathering time than a telescope with more light gathering surface area, so only specific directions of interest with small angular fields of view can be observed. It may only provide 100 ultra high resolution sensitive images per year but those 100 images would prove or discover many things. If done right, the total weight would be very manageable. In space with no wind, no gravity, and protected from direct sunlight, Ultra light weight spars could hold mirrors 100 meters away from the center and provide a stable/dynamically adjustable frame to position every mirror within a fraction of a wavelength. A 200 meter diameter mirror would provide 33 times higher resolution than the JWST. Even if it took 10 full days to gather enough light, the result is worth it. And with a modern approach using thin mirrors, one Falcon 9 could launch 20 large mirrors the size of starlink satellites. Ideally, the interferometer array structure would be assembled as the manned space station of on the moon. If done right, the cost should be a small fraction of the JWST program cost.
The spacecraft wouldn't be connected at all. (Long spars would have unpleasant vibration modes, aren't feasible for kilometer+ distances). The spacecraft would fly in formation, keeping the fixed distance. The formation keeping can be achieved by laser interferometry (the force of light pressure from lasers is zero due to destructive interference when distance is exactly right, and increases when spacecraft drift away from this ideal distance by a few nanometers).
> And with a modern approach using thin mirrors, I'm not sure we have the technology for ultra-thin mirror good enough for optics. But the "normal" several-cm thick mirrors would do. We don't even produce *those* in significant quantities, and build times are something like 4 years for 8m-class mirror.
> Ideally, the interferometer array structure would be assembled as the manned space station of on the moon. If done right, the cost should be a small fraction of the JWST program cost. Why "manned"? IT's totally okay to just launch telescopes as normal satellites, unmanned. "Manned space station on the moon" for less than $10B? I don't think so...
@@denysvlasenko1865 every solution has pros and cons and deserves consideration. I am thinking the spars have the mirrors mounted without actually touching by use of permanent magnets (to minimize vibration) and the spars allow a means to dynamically push the mirrors into precise locations (again using magnetic fields but this time electromagnetic). Both the mirrors and the reference locations on the spars next to the mirrors are all located using interferometry. The mirror corrections are made by small mechanical adjustments to the spar magnets. The small force/ low power electromagnets make corrections not nulled out by machnaical adjustments plus actively damping out/eliminating any vibrations in the mirrors. The mirrors have significant weight so any vibrations they have would be very low frequency. The mirrors are actually assemblies with a Numerous peizeolectric adjustable spacers to a backplate to allow adjusting/eliminating distortions in the mirror geometry. This magnet separation may be overkill. Multiple mirrors at identical off axis distance will all be ground and polished to the same shape, making production easier/cheaper. The telescope can forgo visible wavelengths and start at near infrared depending on cost to grind/polish mirrors to 8th wavelength at 500 nm vs at 1000 nm. Even 2 micron wavelength would work well for distant objects due to Hubble redshift. Ideally, the telescope needs a spectrum analyzer to measure the spectrum of light refracted through an orbiting planet’s atmosphere. The high resolution will allow collecting this refracted sliver of light around a planet without collecting the star’s direct light. The absorption lines in the refracted light’s spectrum will reveal which molecules are in the planet’s atmosphere (including evidence of life friendly environment like water vapor plus evidence of life itself (oxygen, methane, etc). This will allow radio telescope arrays to concentrate their effort on detecting use of the electromagnetic transmissions on those prime candidate planets for intelligent life.
@@denysvlasenko1865 I suspect low cost high quality mirror systems can be mass produced by several tricks 1… economy of scale and increasing the automation/real time gpfeedback during the grinding/polishing process 2… relaxing tolerances by forgoing using the telescope for shorter wavelengths like Visible vs near infrared 3… zero gravity means no mirror sag plus much reduced strength requirements for support structure. 4…. Include a back plate with many piezoelectric spacers to allow more localized dynamic corrections. Each piezeoelectric spacer can be dynamically adjusted by pushing between the back of the optic grade mirror and the non optic grade generic backplate.
Regarding Moon interferometers I would expect temperature changes and differences to be larger than moon quakes. The temperature will vary over time with the orientation of the Sun and over the separation distance between the mirrors.
As far as formation flyers go, if two scopes started in contact with mirrors at a known distance and a known force was applied dislodging them would this not only give increasing resolution over time but also allow for rather good nanometer location of the mirrors or would noise from gravitational interference and gyroscopic forces kick in to throw them off beyond use? It feels like they should drift apart at a known speed and time since split should all one needs to know. Hell I could see such a system getting on opposite sides of the solar system with little divergence from baseline.
Would it be possible to have interferometer with variable distances between them? Say, multiple satellites that laser measure their distances between each other as it varies and then compensate for the variable geometry between each satellite rather than maintain a consistent distance between themselves, then use post processing to produce accurate resolution. Kind of like an amalgamation of synthetic aperture radar and interferometry. If that were in fact achievable you could then piggy back on say a constellation such as star link. Then you would have a mesh network of satellites creating an interferometer larger than the earth without any interference of the atmosphere.
That was great. I think that Boston Dynamics could build some very agile telebots with telescopes instead of heads that could walk in a straight line unreeling fiber optics cable. From here my imagination goes nuts.
Bars to keep separate, chains to ensure shortest distance bar can afford, with telescopes in between, pulling together, in zero gravity, an interferometer as big as you care to have, orbiting any planet or moon
Took me 10 seconds of looking at the thumbnail til my brain stopped reading "Optical Illusion" and started seeing "Optical Resolution"... I blame the algorithm. It threw a lot of such videos my way in the recent past.
For the measurement of the fuzzyness of distant quasars, are those quasars far back enough that you gotta account for the apparent dilation of the size caused by the expansion of the Universe?
Pleass bring Dr van Belle again and again. He is so grounded, so practical. And a delightful communicator.
Thanks!
@@GerardvanBelle I love watching passionate, incredibly well-educated intelligent people communicate about their field of expertise and you're at the peak of anyone I've ever watched. I could watch you talk about this forever.
Mike Rowe ain't got nothing on @@GerardvanBelle !
A scientist with a working microphone isnt easy to find, but Fraser pulls it off. This one was super interesting. You rock Fraser! Great show😊
I mean he claims to not be a scientist all the time. "Journalist not a scientist" so it makes sense
@@jblob5764 but I mean that Fraser finds the scientist with a good mic sometimes. Maybe I got lost in translation. Not native English 😂
@@Robbadobbsoldierohhh that totally makes sense both ways
He says sometimes he decides the audio is too poor and he reschedules after he can send them a better mic
@@charleslivingston2256yeah I know. I guess it’s still a struggle. Scientist use 99.9 percent of brainpower on science stuff and only 0.01 on headsets. It’s only the really smart ones who manages to get a good headset.
Excellent show! Dude knows his stuff and communicates it well
Great interview, but I wish more info about problems with Lunar interferometer: small field of view compared to the cost, micrometeorites hitting mirrors, cosmic rays hitting light sensors, mechanic wear of movable parts that compensate different distance of primary mirrors to the star, dust covering mirrors.
and day/night temp cycling, lunar quakes, .....
The environment on the surface of the moon, aside from temperature, is very much like anywhere else in space. JWST gets about twice the micrometeorites than you would on the moon, because there's no moon blocking half the sky.
@Greenicegod Rate of cosmic rays is also reduced by half by the Moon. Any data about the rate of secondary micro/nano-meteorites? Without atmosphere and with lower gravity their range is long.
Shouldn't be a dust problem because there's nothing to kick it up.
@@kamilZ2 no idea, but any secondary ejecta will be traveling less than 2.4km/s, the moon's escape velocity. That's an order of magnitude less than normal micrometeorites.
Fraser, that was an epic interview - He comes over as a really decent guy who just loves what he does and communicating that as clearly and precisely as possible - that is a man who deserves more interviews in the future.
When I was a teenager my mom did an internship at Lowell they were super friendly and inviting. They were all too willing to indulge a young kid interested in astronomy, I got to access a lot of areas most people didn't get to enter. It was kickass. The physics dept at NAU was also very inviting. Those psychos had a fuckin railgun in the basement. No reason just because. Awesome city to live in if you're trying to follow physics/cosmology/astronomy in general. Thank you for being so welcoming to a completely unqualified teenager such as myself!
Fraser, you are the best interviewer I know of in any field. On top of that it is such an exciting topic and Dr. van Belle is such a wonderful communicator, too. Thanks for your constantly exceptional work!
The advantage of 1 big expensive telescope vs lots of cheaper ones is it's safer, or it spreads the risk.
I'm so pleased I'm in the JWST didn't explode universe.
My buddy just graduated with his PhD doing research on LISA, the jumbo interferometer that's going to detect gravitational waves. Proud of you, KuyGuy.
Your friend should go to China. The US is faltering on the telescope research front.
Seems like the perfect project for those 2 spare hubbles NASA has. Send them up one at a time, then send a crew up to connect them with rigid struts and an interferometer.
Two telescopes only give you good resolution in one direction. Need more, preferably many more.
One is already being used for the Roman Space Telescope. But yeah, if the military has more to donate.
@@frasercain Just need to get some of the spares that are launched under those SpaceX DOD missions, and replace the firmware on them to get better long term stability, and also to be able to get long exposure times as opposed to the existing ultra short image times they use, plus turn the gyro units around so it points the other way, and add on some star finders, and a sun tracker to close the door when it is going to point too close to the sun.
@frasercain aren't the two telescopes already in space? when you reported they'd been given to Nasa it seemed as if they were no longer needed as spy satellites because better upgrades were now in use ? did you mention that they hadn't been launched, and I missed it?
@@denysvlasenko1865Hubble resolution in the x direction and 20 times Hubble resolution in the y direction can still be very useful. Many objects are point light sources like a double star. And several images taken with a rotated x,y axis can allow recreating an image with high resolution in both x and y directions.
Wow, thank you so much. I've been wondering the answers to all of the questions for years. Especially every amature putting a combined interferometer together and why we haven't done it. Man, i learned sooo much here. I cant begin to tell you how appreciative i am to you for this interview.
Edit: I wrote above after a few minutes. Now I'm at the end and 😲 I'm floored.
Really enjoying these longer, more in depth interviews, Fraser.
Another fascinating topic and discussion.
Mind blown!! What an amazing interview...ok now...let us get it done😃🌠
Great interview. Good luck to Dr. Gerard in his great interferometer quest. It sounds very promising and very practical to build. Let's get this done..
I still can't believe that there's not a radio telescope made out of telescopes that are co-orbital with the Earth that has an effective aperture diameter of 2 au. It's 2024 for goodness sake.
I also can't believe that the ISS crew in space aren't assembling giant space telescopes and truss structures to hold them in place. Like what are they even doing up there?
YOURE THE BEST, NEVER FORGET THAT. MY CAT STEPPED ON THE CAPS LOCK
You left it on but yea he's cool
CATS ARE THE BEST TYPERS EVER
thE WORst iS WHen YOUr cat and YOu are FIghtinG OVEr thE CAPS-Lock kEY.
TELL YOUR CAT TO STOP SHOUTING
YOUR SIGNAL IS COMING IN LOUD AND CLEAR. WHICH BRINGS UP AN IMPORTANT QUESTION: HOW TO LEVERAGE THE POWER OF CATS TO IMPROVE WIDE APERTURE INTERFEROMETRY?
This is fantastic again. I really love these discussions. If only I had several billion to fund these types of projects.
You bring on the best people to interview. Love your work and dedication in bring science to the people.
I just love this concept! So simple, so inexpensive and so scalable.
Fascinating, I just hope all us middle-aged guys are still around to see interferometers in space!😄👍👍
What an amazing interview, and the best part...in summary there are more questions I now have than when it started. Thank you Fraser and team.
Awesome interview, absolutely loved it! I sometimes skip interviews but so glad I didn't!! 😃
oh screw 2". give this team 2.5m and two remote collectors. national priority.
This was a great interview, I've also been obsessed with interferometers. I would love to build a small array of radio telescopes in my back yard even!
LOWELL!!! Sorry, I'm from near NAU and am happy at remembering that gorgeous place
Great interview! Dr. van Belle is totally going to be played by Brian Cranston in the movie.
That was really fantastic. I hope to one day live through there being a large cluster of interferometer telescopes that can resolve details on other planets.
I been fascinated with interferometers since I learned about them in Radio telescopes as a child. Thanks for this, I pray I live to see the day.
A very interesting interview! Thanks for all you do to bring this information to the general public!!!!!
Fraser, for the interferometer, the conversation about the distance and the signal becoming fuzzy; if the ideal distance is 80meter, you can place a third one, etc, would that increase resolution or cover more angle; or maybe it is a choice of the telescope configuration, maybe even reconfigurable?
A third telescope would benefit as now you would have 3 pairs of telescopes and 3 fringes instead of 1. You also get a closure phase with 3 scopes which gives data regarding asymmetry of your target. Non-spherical stars and binary systems benefit from 3 scopes versus just 2.
I stumbled in your channel just now. How could I have missed such an amazing program?
Very informative. I love these interviews!
Very interesting. Thank you both for explaining this so well.
What a fantastic idea! (2” mirrors on a cheap moon lander.)
I’m confused on one thing though: He talked about the light being carried back over an optical fiber to be merged with that from the other mirror. You can funnel all the wavefront detail from the whole 2” mirror down through a single fiber? (Or if it’s a multi-fiber bundle, basically the same question: how do you maintain all the resolution of the wavefront data from the mirror?)
I suspect it is a fiber bundle like an endoscope. My understanding is that the termination is more expensive than adding length.
I suppose as long as you have enough fibers in the bundle to provide at least as much resolution as the separation allows, it won't be a problem. Optics aren't really my field and I was also wondering how fiber optics would impact the signal.
You can really use optics to focus the entire aperture into a single fiber, that's pretty much the point.
@@TheAlchaemist Amazing that you can retain all the wavefront detail after focusing it down to a he diameter of a fiber 🤯
@@TheAlchaemist I thought that bouncing down the fiber distorted the optical signal, making each fiber mostly useful as the equivalent of a single pixel.
Solving one term of the Fermi equation at a time. Love it.
2:00 “enjoy the conversation with Doctor Jared Van Belle…”
/cut to interview/
“Gerard, thanks for being here…”
Fraser, i really appreciate your programs. One of the best space programs on the web. You have amazing access to insiders, and love the depth of your reporting. What year will we be able to image the surface of planets around Alpha Centauri?
Sounds like an excellent (test/dummy payload?) use of optimus to lay out 100 of them on about a (1km/100m?) grid on starship's first lunar landing? He's answering questions as I type...
This great video make me even more impatient about lunar missions by publicly traded / private startups., and self sustaining colony which is so feasible and so late. , We had one success this year. but Starship, in 2036? 8 refuels on that beast? they are delivering intuitive Machines Nova C on an F9, IM-1 was brought part way and it landed successfully, Im-2 got a huge contract, and others to do that and Optimus isn't part of the picture, nor do Starship CEO really care about the moon. we don't need androids with one hour batteries ,we need to put our boots on the ground of the Moon for a second habitat. .
certain people have fans, but not friends to question what they are doing. they SpaceX spacesuits work, a private team paid for that mission themselves and people could go there on falcon 9s.
i don't know why this Mars obsession .,. we can actually build a real starship if we were in the vacuum we'd could make so much progress. Love the SpaceX but they have too many unnecessary projects, and real investors on lunar colony startups suffer delays . The moon will give us that "multiplanetary" step, even if its a moon, its immunity and support to catastrophe that happens on earth.
Breakfast = egg sandwich and an engaging Fraser Cain discussion.
A very good for of mine worked on the development of a interferometer radio telescope in the 1960's-1970's...big PCBs with many, many TTL ICs..
Fascinating. So are the 'simple' pair of telescopes planned for the initial mission on the moon steerable? They have to track the target star together and still maintain nanometer accuracy?
I just read Thomas J. Kelly's (no relation) marvelous book "Moon Lander", and it mentioned the fact that the later missions placed not only seismographs on the Moon, but active seismic sources. The most intriguing to me was reference to mortars the astronauts set up, which, after their departure, launched rocket-propelled explosive charges to wide distances. Apollo, in effect, set up a seismic interferometer on the Moon, and that is how we have mapped its interior.
Here's where to start: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunar_Seismic_Profiling_Experiment
This was simply deep info. I loved it !!!
Interesting. Once peripherally in college was aware through a friend working in astronomy lab of their VLBI (very long baseline interferometry) calibration where the participating radio telescopes accessed by my alma mater, and others around the world, were both anchored to cartography points with laser measurements for very precise location registration and their signal timestamps synchronized with atomic clocks to make the signal data of the participating radio telescopes coherent in a way that their superposition was possible to contain the planetary size virtual radio telescope accuracy of measurement.
Amazing interview! I hope they get to fly their small test mission!
Another fascinating interview, thanks Fraser!
You are uncannily excellent at this. Period.
Best episode ever. imo. Optical interferometry is the future.
Great interview
1:02:38 We do have quite a few pixels of Betelgeuse, though, unless I'm completely misunderstanding something. They've been viewing the irregularity of its disc since at least 2017, from ALMA at least, and those are not small discs on the images.
Formation flying is a lot easier if the birds are all connected together with fibers, and are charged up to a high static charge to repel one another and keep the fibers in tension. Probably you need a lightweight sunscreen as big as the whole array to keep ions in the solar wind from masking the fields. The sunscreen would also need to participate in the formation, and would act as a solar sail, so might best be a bit inboard of Earth's Lagrange point 2. (Sadly, Earth's shadow would not help there, as solar wind is not strictly radial.) Making the sunshade conical would minimize thrust, and be structurally more stable.
I like that idea.
Fibers would vibrate.
Formation flying is easier with nothing. "Best part is no part".
great informative discussion super stuff thankyou
Ditto… great interview, easy to understand but didn’t dumb it down.
Thank you Fraser... Loved that
I like it when the US uses grenades for goodness...
Good luck to you in your space interferometer project.
Jovian L2 interferometer: it's in permanent eclipse, so no worries about solar radiation and no difficulty cooling anything, nothing ever changes temperature or shape. Put a 40 kg RTG and 12 100 watt lasers (only use 1 at a time) on each mirror element, and there's your precision manuvering- photon momentum is plenty (1 m/s per year, or 4 days to do a 1 km manuver). No moving parts!
Great interview. Loved it.
Appreciate ya. Thanks for sharing.
Fraser, I recall doing the calculations of resolving power. Put a range of hubble space telescopes around Earth orbit and connected up as an interferometer, and one could resolve street maps on some of the planets in nearbye star systems. Technically not achievable, various issues, including stability of orbits and refuelling. Also sensitivity is an issue here separate to resolution power. But fun calculations. Oh yeah and the analogue vs digital issue. (oops).
Dr Van Belle was a very engaging guest! Thanks for having him on the show.
This is how the Chara Array by Georgia State University works in the basic concept. I helped with it in the early stages as a student there.
Construction in space (particularly on the moon) has another benefit for telescopes. Get a mold spinning, and a liquid in it (eg molten glass) will create a parabolic surface.
Mine blowing indeed, and all very well put. I want to build my own interferometer now! 😅
You can. Just take a telescope and mask the aperture with small open holes on opposite edges of the lens or mirror. Look at a bright star. The light interferes and under high magnification, you can see the dark lines of the interference in the airy disk.
@@normvargas2799 that's really cool, I need to try this thank you
The idea of measuring the the smallest thing ever - the plank length, using the biggest thing ever - millions of light years of quantum foam, is poetically beautiful - love it 00:29:46
Need to read up where the technology is at to have well separated interferometer telescopes, like for radio waves. Is it fundamentals of physics or better components needed? As soon as you realise a photon your interferometer doesn't work right? Quantum physics etc? He's talking about 100m fibre optic cable, not so bad, people would try his 2 inch concept on the ground, but in a building. Very educational.
Got a question for ya. Do we have any plans to backup all of our digital information about everything on the Moon?
We should use this to image alpha centauri system
Question. The Monday question thing. Everyone including here, talks about the "simulations" or "models" of the early universe, and then show a pretty graphic of the early universe. Every now and then I'd like to see what the scientists see from these models god dang it! Hank Hill reference, but pointing it out probably loses something.
Could a inflatable frame for a large telescope work in space?
Hi Fraser Great interview as usual :) I have a question. Would it be possible to digitally encode the images from each individual telescope is such a way as they could be combined at a later date?
It's not that simple, more like stuff from the double split experiment? Needing an undergraduate understanding after the first or second year of a course? Some speculation: if you can capture live holograms with the phase plane, and transfer this data, might get somewhere with these sensors.
Looking forward to hearing about the grenades the Apolo astronauts used on the moon.
It seems like timing is the single most critical element for planetary-surface levels of resolution. Lets go big: 1 meter at 100LY. To get this done, the collection optics would need to be a couple AU apart. Rather than relying upon quantum networks (which will be great once we actually have them) couldn't we simply capture images and then beam the data to a centrally located interferometry center in an out of band manner; to ensure phase alignment we would worry more about the time dilatation of the out of band transit operation rather than the actual collection event. This makes it a lot easier, it seems.
I don't get the idea of why we cannot combine many small optical telescopes together through ethernet. For the fit file, doesn't it have the timestamp? If the NTP time server is not accurate enough, the telescope can get the GPS clock instead. Thx @13:40 does the "coherent" means time? Nanometer tolerance? After photo stacking, the noise can be reduced a lot, right? Thx
i think for optical light you need somewhere in the region of femtosecond (10e-15) accurate timestamping (basically the wavelength divided by c, maybe even half that), GPS timestamps are accurate to about 130 nanoseconds on average (10e-9)... So there has to be an improvement of 8 orders of magnitude minimum to be useable. (basically you have to get the time of every wave of the light arriving, so you can match it to the very same Wave on the other Telesecope)
Also GPS timestamp wasnt good enough for the EHT either, they have afaik used an own atomic clock at each location...
Awesome show!
Undoubtably a Dutchman from origin with such a name!
Hopefully version 2 of the concept is modular, and can plug in more as the need arises. Not exactly a space race, but knowing there's something good going on the moon will be making the ground telescope people work harder.
I am surprised that terahertz computing wasn’t mentioned as being the missing link to make optical interference imaging possible.
super interesting interview!
Imagine living long enough to see appreciable pictures of close exoplanets 😍
Great stuff!!
Hey Fraser, does the Event Horizon telescope have any other targets in the works?
I cannot WAIT till you do the deep dive on friggin MOON GRENADES.
Space based interferometer array is obviously the ideal cost effective sequel to the JWST. The trade off is requiring more photon gathering time than a telescope with more light gathering surface area, so only specific directions of interest with small angular fields of view can be observed. It may only provide 100 ultra high resolution sensitive images per year but those 100 images would prove or discover many things.
If done right, the total weight would be very manageable. In space with no wind, no gravity, and protected from direct sunlight, Ultra light weight spars could hold mirrors 100 meters away from the center and provide a stable/dynamically adjustable frame to position every mirror within a fraction of a wavelength. A 200 meter diameter mirror would provide 33 times higher resolution than the JWST. Even if it took 10 full days to gather enough light, the result is worth it. And with a modern approach using thin mirrors, one Falcon 9 could launch 20 large mirrors the size of starlink satellites. Ideally, the interferometer array structure would be assembled as the manned space station of on the moon. If done right, the cost should be a small fraction of the JWST program cost.
The spacecraft wouldn't be connected at all. (Long spars would have unpleasant vibration modes, aren't feasible for kilometer+ distances).
The spacecraft would fly in formation, keeping the fixed distance. The formation keeping can be achieved by laser interferometry (the force of light pressure from lasers is zero due to destructive interference when distance is exactly right, and increases when spacecraft drift away from this ideal distance by a few nanometers).
> And with a modern approach using thin mirrors,
I'm not sure we have the technology for ultra-thin mirror good enough for optics.
But the "normal" several-cm thick mirrors would do. We don't even produce *those* in significant quantities, and build times are something like 4 years for 8m-class mirror.
> Ideally, the interferometer array structure would be assembled as the manned space station of on the moon. If done right, the cost should be a small fraction of the JWST program cost.
Why "manned"? IT's totally okay to just launch telescopes as normal satellites, unmanned. "Manned space station on the moon" for less than $10B? I don't think so...
@@denysvlasenko1865 every solution has pros and cons and deserves consideration. I am thinking the spars have the mirrors mounted without actually touching by use of permanent magnets (to minimize vibration) and the spars allow a means to dynamically push the mirrors into precise locations (again using magnetic fields but this time electromagnetic). Both the mirrors and the reference locations on the spars next to the mirrors are all located using interferometry. The mirror corrections are made by small mechanical adjustments to the spar magnets. The small force/ low power electromagnets make corrections not nulled out by machnaical adjustments plus actively damping out/eliminating any vibrations in the mirrors. The mirrors have significant weight so any vibrations they have would be very low frequency. The mirrors are actually assemblies with a
Numerous peizeolectric adjustable spacers to a backplate to allow adjusting/eliminating distortions in the mirror geometry.
This magnet separation may be overkill. Multiple mirrors at identical off axis distance will all be ground and polished to the same shape, making production easier/cheaper. The telescope can forgo visible wavelengths and start at near infrared depending on cost to grind/polish mirrors to 8th wavelength at 500 nm vs at 1000 nm. Even 2 micron wavelength would work well for distant objects due to Hubble redshift. Ideally, the telescope needs a spectrum analyzer to measure the spectrum of light refracted through an orbiting planet’s atmosphere. The high resolution will allow collecting this refracted sliver of light around a planet without collecting the star’s direct light. The absorption lines in the refracted light’s spectrum will reveal which molecules are in the planet’s atmosphere (including evidence of life friendly environment like water vapor plus evidence of life itself (oxygen, methane, etc). This will allow radio telescope arrays to concentrate their effort on detecting use of the electromagnetic transmissions on those prime candidate planets for intelligent life.
@@denysvlasenko1865 I suspect low cost high quality mirror systems can be mass produced by several tricks
1… economy of scale and increasing the automation/real time gpfeedback during the grinding/polishing process
2… relaxing tolerances by forgoing using the telescope for shorter wavelengths like Visible vs near infrared
3… zero gravity means no mirror sag plus much reduced strength requirements for support structure.
4…. Include a back plate with many piezoelectric spacers to allow more localized dynamic corrections. Each piezeoelectric spacer can be dynamically adjusted by pushing between the back of the optic grade mirror and the non optic grade generic backplate.
I wonder what you could do with 2 telescopes mounted to the front and back of starship or the ISS
Artemis missions...that's all i needed to hear.
Did eLISA teach us anything about precision flying in space that could be used for a space interferometers like you were talking about?
Would a Moon Interferometer be affected by astronauts working on the moon? Great interview! Thanks so many much!
I think you could make some amazing 3D Stereoscopic pics and Stereo Time lapse movies! Yeah, get er done already
Regarding Moon interferometers I would expect temperature changes and differences to be larger than moon quakes. The temperature will vary over time with the orientation of the Sun and over the separation distance between the mirrors.
I guess so, but these things can be modelled out, and these cycles are way longer than the proposed exposition times.
As far as formation flyers go, if two scopes started in contact with mirrors at a known distance and a known force was applied dislodging them would this not only give increasing resolution over time but also allow for rather good nanometer location of the mirrors or would noise from gravitational interference and gyroscopic forces kick in to throw them off beyond use? It feels like they should drift apart at a known speed and time since split should all one needs to know. Hell I could see such a system getting on opposite sides of the solar system with little divergence from baseline.
This is awesome 😎🙌
What about a 2d sensor? Did you think the possibility to use 2d SPAD sensor, time tag the photons and recombine the signal as post process?
Would it be possible to have interferometer with variable distances between them? Say, multiple satellites that laser measure their distances between each other as it varies and then compensate for the variable geometry between each satellite rather than maintain a consistent distance between themselves, then use post processing to produce accurate resolution. Kind of like an amalgamation of synthetic aperture radar and interferometry. If that were in fact achievable you could then piggy back on say a constellation such as star link. Then you would have a mesh network of satellites creating an interferometer larger than the earth without any interference of the atmosphere.
That was great. I think that Boston Dynamics could build some very agile telebots with telescopes instead of heads that could walk in a straight line unreeling fiber optics cable. From here my imagination goes nuts.
In future will it be possible to make an interferometer with stars and galaxies as apertures? Good discussion ❤
Bars to keep separate, chains to ensure shortest distance bar can afford, with telescopes in between, pulling together, in zero gravity, an interferometer as big as you care to have, orbiting any planet or moon
How do you compensate for the rotation of the moon.
The night sky will still be moving at about 15 degrees an hour ?
Took me 10 seconds of looking at the thumbnail til my brain stopped reading "Optical Illusion" and started seeing "Optical Resolution"...
I blame the algorithm. It threw a lot of such videos my way in the recent past.
For the measurement of the fuzzyness of distant quasars, are those quasars far back enough that you gotta account for the apparent dilation of the size caused by the expansion of the Universe?