The Columbus Dispatch

Telescope on moon to peer back in time

Astronomer­s want to build liquid mirror to study the Big Bang

- Doyle Rice

Although it happened over 13 billion years ago, astronomer­s still want to see the Big Bang.

Now, they’re proposing to put a huge telescope on the moon to study the first stars in the universe: “The telescope would be able to observe the first stars that formed after the Big Bang, out of material made in the Big Bang,” University of Texas astronomer Anna Schauer said.

No telescope today can peer back that far in time, not even NASA’S much-delayed and soon-to-be-launched James Webb Space Telescope, she said.

The proposed lunar telescope, which Schauer has nicknamed the “Ultimately Large Telescope,” would have a liquid mirror more than 300 feet in diameter.

Rather than glass, the telescope’s mirror would be made of liquid, as it’s lighter, and cheaper, to transport to the moon. The telescope’s mirror would be a spinning vat of liquid, topped by a metallic – and thus reflective – liquid.

The telescope would be located inside a crater at the moon’s north or south pole.

The moon would be an ideal location for the telescope, Schauer said: “In order to observe stars that far away and that early in the universe, we need to get out of the Earth’s atmosphere because it is blocking the light in the wavelength­s we would need to see.

“We can achieve this by building a telescope on the moon,” she said.

The idea for a telescope on the moon has been floated before, in 2008 by a team led by Roger Angel of the University of Arizona, but was shelved by NASA.

Such a telescope would admittedly be expensive, and the infrastruc­ture needed to build it on the moon doesn’t yet exist and could be decades away, according to Schauer. But the payoff would be worth it, astronomer­s say.

“We live in a universe of stars,” University of Texas astronomer Volker Bromm said in a statement. “The emergence of the first stars marks a crucial transition in the history of the universe, when the primordial conditions set by the Big Bang gave way to an ever-increasing cosmic complexity, eventually bringing life to planets, life, and intelligen­t beings like us.

“This moment of first light lies beyond the capabiliti­es of current or near-future telescopes,” Bromm said. “It is therefore important to think about the ‘ultimate’ telescope, one that is capable of directly observing those elusive first stars at the edge of time.”

The astronomer­s’ telescope proposal will be published in an upcoming issue of The Astrophysi­cal Journal.

 ?? ROGER ANGEL/UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA ?? A proposed liquid-mirror telescope would be built at one of the moon’s poles.
ROGER ANGEL/UNIVERSITY OF ARIZONA A proposed liquid-mirror telescope would be built at one of the moon’s poles.

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