Distant Planet Imaging Project Gets More Funding 264
It doesn't come easy writes "NASA's Institute for Advanced Concepts has chosen a proposal by the University of Colorado (UC) at Boulder to image distant planets around other stars for a second round of funding. Known as the New Worlds Observer, the UC project is for an orbiting, soccer-field sized "starshade" shaped like a daisy that would funnel light from distant planets between its petals to a second spacecraft trailing 50,000 miles behind. If the concept proves feasible, it could 'identify planetary features like oceans, continents, polar caps and cloud banks, and even detect biomarkers like methane, water, oxygen and ozone [...]'"
I just hope... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I just hope... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:I just hope... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I just hope... (Score:2)
Re:I just hope... (Score:2)
Sounds cool... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sounds cool... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Sounds cool... (Score:2)
Remember -- I don't take checks.
Just guessing here... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's probably shaped that way because to get it into space you have to fold it up into a shape that will fit into a launch vehicle fairing. A BIG fairing only gives you about a 5 meter diameter, so a lot of folding is required. Some kind of unfolding truss would make sense to me.
Re:Sounds cool... (Score:2, Troll)
However, in this case the questioning was based on a complete lack of understanding. Now, I don't have much of a problem with that. That's fine. It's when people provide stupid alternatives that I take offense.
It was, like it or not, stupid to suggest that the design be scrapped and replaced with a large garage funnel.
Re:Sounds cool... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Sounds cool... (Score:2)
Yup... (Score:2)
All they need now is an artists impression of what it might look like.
Re:Yup... (Score:4, Funny)
*
_
Here (Score:2, Informative)
Hey... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Hey... (Score:3, Funny)
CU not UC (Score:2, Informative)
But cool project. It would be interesting to see what other worlds look like, not just know that they are there.
Re:CU not UC (Score:3, Informative)
For reference "UC" is California (UCLA for the LA campus, UCSD for the San Diego campus, you get the idea.)
"UConn" is the University of Connecticut.
"CU" is the University of Colorado, "DU" is the University of Denver.
This sounds pendantic but searches for "UC" will bring up the wrong universities.
Re:CU not UC (Score:2)
Re:CU not UC (Score:2, Funny)
Re:CU not UC (Score:2, Funny)
Re:CU not UC (Score:2)
Actually, that is only true most of the time. For some reason the smaller (8-9 thousand students) campus at Colorado Springs uses both "CU Colorado Springs" and "UCCS". The Denver campus and the Health Sciences campus stick with CU. I don't know why they are inconsistent, blame the CU [cu.edu] regents for that one.
Let me guess (Score:2)
You guessed right... (Score:2)
My Bad. (Score:2)
How will the religious establishment react? (Score:4, Interesting)
How would the religious establishment react? Such discoveries would, in effect, refute many of the religious claims.
We have already seen pseudo Christians going to extreme lengths to ban the teaching of evolution in places like Kansas and Tennessee. Would they take a similar route were discoveries that didn't mesh to well with their teachings to be found?
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyway, this does seem a little bit like getting a map of China when you don't even have the means of transportation to get past the 7-11 at the e
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Right now we don't have the technology to visit such places. But in perhaps 20 or 30 years we might. That's really not a very long time, all things considered. And with the pro-religion, anti-scientific stance of the current American administration, there's a very good chance that it won't be Americans visiting these planets for the first time. It may very well be the Chinese getting there first, just because they didn't let religion interfere with the
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
RUNtse de FWOtzoo, ching baoYO wuomun...
Ok, I get dibs on Londinium. I want the shiny hat.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2, Insightful)
Probably more like 200-300 years. The technical obstacles to interstellar flight are enormous. We not only don't know how to do it, we don't know how to get to the point where we know how to do it.
But I think we will. Future technology is not only stranger than we imagine, it is stranger than we can imagine.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
But finding something interesting there could drive faster development of the means to get there.
You must be new here (Score:2)
Where "here" = among the living on planet Earth, if you actually think Scientologists welcome scientists nosing into their racket.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:3)
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
Oh, that was good. $cientologists are about as anti-science as it gets. That's like saying Christian Scientists are real big fans of the medical community.
Here's a hint. Just because the word "science" appears in some group's name doesn't necessarily mean they are open to to scientific principles or discoveries.
Now I await the punishment of $cientologist moderators.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:5, Insightful)
If there is an all powerful deity, surely it's within the power of such deity to create more than one earth.
Genesis specifies how this earth was created. It says nothing of the existance or non-existance of others.
It's kind of like how physics neither requires nor rules out any deity.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
How else would we react?
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Are we forgetting that the bible claims our Earth is the center of the universe?
center of the universe? (Score:2)
Re:center of the universe? (Score:2)
Not everything done in the name of religion is actually in accordance with the teachings of that religion. Galileo's ideas conflicted with an (at the time) commonly accepted interpretation of the Bible, not the actual content of the Bible. Jesus was arrested as a heretic as well for similar reasons.
Re:center of the universe? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:5, Informative)
The presence of even lifeless planets beyond earth was deeply troubling for early theologans, and the concept was widely denied for theological reasons. "Great lights" that light noone's sky. Tracts of land far greater than those on Earth, doing nothing, for noone - I.e., God creating in vain. If they did have life, they couldn't trace it back to adam, et al. Such a huge act of creation, and God didn't see if fit to put a word of it in the bible? There were all sorts of major problems, and it took a long time to get it accepted.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
I expect that this will be portrayed as another NASA hoax.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:3, Insightful)
It's also within his power to create purple giraffes with opposable thumbs. Many people however just don't like to believe that the Earth is NOT the center of their God's universe. Earth would then be demoted to the status of YAP (yet another planet).
The existence of intelligent life elsewhere in the Universe calls into question our own place in it. If we are just one of billions of intelligent
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Second, who says that they will believe it? People today seem to have a unique ability to ignore evidence and truth.
Interest (Score:2)
And guess who those interest payments are going to? (Hint #1: Not you. Hint #2: Nobody you know. Hint #3: I wonder how China paid for its new space program...)
Re:Budgets (Score:3, Interesting)
The problem is that we are going to have to make budgetary choices again. Poppa Bush and Clinton did that to balance the budget that Reagan ran up. Now, GWB has made Reagan look positively responsible. No doubt that the next admin will have to raise taxes, but they will also have to cut spending. And since we have only made ourselves more dependent on Middle east oil and Chinese products, we will have to c
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Also, it's relatively unclear what religious claims are invalidated by the existence of extrasolar planets. Prior to the discover of non-human intelligent life on another planet, Christianity, for example, would have pretty much no difficulty. God put all those planets and life forms there for us to enjoy when we are sufficiently technologically advanced, presumably.
Theologically, things don't really get interesting at all until
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:5, Funny)
That's right. You show me some ET's, and I'll show you some Christians that want to baptize them.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
THose thoughts aside, I can recommend The Sparrow [amazon.com] by Mary Doria Russell [amazon.com] which revolves around Jesuits and ETs. Good read.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2, Insightful)
Either :
1: Lock the person up.
2: Deny that the observation is real.
3: Make up a fake observation to counteract the real one.
4: Invade the plannet in the name of good wiping out evil.
5: Pray they don't come and invade us, but put a few draconian laws in place just in case they do.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
> of the universe."
Try, the Bible does not say the Earth is the center of the universe.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Right, because YOU KNOW NOTHING AT ALL about it. Not even if it exists. Remember, it's all about faith, not about knowledge
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2, Troll)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
The heaven is everything 'above' earth's sky, including other planets and stars. So there you have it, theological quandary solved. And in the first 7 words no less!
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
Some old rabbinical myths (Rabbinic Talmud )say Adam had another wife, Lilith, before Eve.
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:5, Interesting)
Exactly how they've reacted for every other scientific discovery made in the past that contradicts religion - half of them will deny it, and half of them will quietly tell themselves that part of their religion is metaphorical (and always has been).
That's a perfect example. Half of them are denying it, and half of them are saying that Genesis is metaphorical (and always has been).
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:2)
From another post in this thread you say to another poster:
If they're going with a flower-shaped design, then there's most likely a very good reason for it. Considering that these people are far more intelligent than you, your idea is worthless
Ca
Since you're probably thinking about Creationism (Score:2)
Re:How will the religious establishment react? (Score:5, Interesting)
Powerful religious groups can often have a profound impact upon the development and progress of a nation.
They could have chosen a better Acronym (Score:2, Funny)
Re:They could have chosen a better Acronym (Score:3, Funny)
No Google Reference - Can't Be True (Score:4, Funny)
And in other news (Score:5, Funny)
Why not? That would be useful. (Score:2)
Something like that combined with www.nineplanets.org, would be inspirational.
But wait, there's more! (Score:4, Funny)
> continents, polar caps and cloud banks, and even
> detect biomarkers like methane
The bad part will come with version 3.0, launched in the later part of this century, when we zoom on on their alien babes on beaches, and see if they have silly laws regulating nudity, too. Or churches.
Quite frankly, I'd be way more scared if they had churches than if they did not.
Re:But wait, there's more! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:But wait, there's more! (Score:3, Funny)
Phew. (Score:3, Funny)
Having recently watched Independence Day, I can say that I'm relieved that NASA is finally getting around to that RFDEW (Really F#*king Distant Early Warnings) system I've been proposing for years.
Steerable? (Score:5, Insightful)
Very cool. However, there's one little problem --- how the hell do you turn it? If the sensor's got to be 50'000km away from the lens, then to turn it 90 degrees (why does Slashdot block Unicode?) you're going to have to move the sensor some 70'000km, which means a lot of hydrazine.
Or do they have something more cunning up their sleeves?
Re:Steerable? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Steerable? (Score:2)
(And no, this is slashdot, so I didn't read the article either.)
Re:Steerable? (Score:2)
Only if you need to go fast. If, instead, you go slowly then it's not a problem. 70,000km at 10km/h is about 291 days. Presumably once a general alignment is achieved many systems can be analyzed with only small changes.
Hydrazine isn't the only available means of propulsion. This looks like a great application for an ion drive. The small thrust and easily controlled throttle would make frequent, precise alignment maneuvers easier than it might be with traditional thrusters
Re:Steerable? (Score:2)
Not true at all.
Imagine a sunshade that's in Earth's orbit (not in orbit around Earth, but in the same orbit) with the sensor craft coorbital but trailing. In the course of a year, your field of view will traverse 360 degrees
Re:Steerable? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is listed as a "problem" by the folks developing it.
Actually, however, there's a much bigger problem. Presuming that you have the sensor facing away from the sun (if you don't, then you face even bigger issues), then the 50k km spacing leads to the two objects being in separate orbits. The sensor will travel around the sun at a slightly faster rate than the shield, which means you have to adjust orbits on a pretty frequent basis. This becomes less and less of a problem the further away from the sun you are (and being further away has its own advantages too), but it's still an issue no matter what.
Keeping the entire thing in alignment is a huge problem -- even if you ignore needing to turn it (which you certainly will; it may be a pinhole camera, but the longer the exposure time the better the picture -- if you can pivot the entire thing continuously that is).
Reminded me of Star Trek - I am Nomad (Score:2)
This reminded me of Star Trek, Ep. 37 'The Changeling'
Nomad was sent out by Earth "in the early 2000s" according to Kirk on a mission to scout for life. Nomad collided with a meteor and was damaged and had lost a good portion of its memory until it encountered another probe, this one alien, with equ
biomarkers (Score:3, Interesting)
I hope I live to see the day when this thing detects a faint glow on the planet's continents that are facing away from the planet's sun at that moment. *shudder*
Re:biomarkers (Score:2, Funny)
Re:biomarkers (Score:2)
You mean evidence of intelligent life? Cuz volcanoes can cause the same thing.
Re:biomarkers (Score:2)
As I was typing that, I was thinking that it might also be some kind of biolumenescent plant life.
Re:biomarkers (Score:2)
Natural light is going to be basically blackbody radiation coressponding to the temperature of the luminous object.
Accuracy a problem? (Score:2, Interesting)
Can we really move a pinhole shaped opening directly in front of the target at 50,000km?
So the images would go into... (Score:4, Funny)
Blind Lake? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Blind Lake? (Score:2)
More info (Score:3, Informative)
There's a PDF [usra.edu] on this project that may contain more info, but my copy of Acrobat (6.0) declines to render the entire thing (or the PDF is junk, dunno which).
There's also an article on Astrobio.net [astrobio.net] that gives little more detail than the CU link... but it does have links to other sources that may be informative. Really though, this concept seems to be in such an infancy stage that "simple" questions like "so how do you turn it?" haven't been answered yet (in fact, in this NASA link [nasa.gov] how to keep the two craft in alignment is listed as a "main technological hurdle").
Imagine the possibilities! (Score:3, Funny)
Great.... (Score:2, Funny)
Let's just clue the entire galaxy in to the fact that so many hippies live here.
long way between "study" and "launch" (Score:2)
It's really a weapon (Score:3, Funny)
Imaging is the Hard Part (Score:5, Insightful)
Imaging the surfaces will be tougher. You'll need a damn wide apeture (long integration don't help and the resolving power goes linearly with apeture). Remember, we've only imaged a few stars so far, and most of those are larger (in angular size) than these planets. Crud, look at Cassini: we're only getting good images of moons in our own solar system now because we have a spacecraft flying close to them.
Wow, thanks for that well thought-out analysis (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously, why did you even bother typing?