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Concepts for fully-steerable and survey VLSTs at a manned base at the Moon’s south pole. Roger Angel University of Arizona. The Science potential of a 10-30 m UV/Optical Space Telescope, STScI Feb 2004. Telescopes over past 50 years. Space from sounding rockets to great observatories
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Concepts for fully-steerable and survey VLSTs at a manned base at the Moon’s south pole Roger Angel University of Arizona The Science potential of a 10-30 m UV/Optical Space Telescope, STScI Feb 2004
Telescopes over past 50 years • Space • from sounding rockets to great observatories • Each successive mission is uniquely powerful • Typically scientific and failure lifetime ≤10 yr • Hubble exception • Ground • Not much size increase • Huge increase in power by better detectors, multiplexing and adaptive optics • Long-lived, rejuvenation on ~ 5-10 year timescale as science goals and technology change
Next 50 years on ground(you must put future space plans in this context) Several telescopes in 20 – 100 m range • AO should mature to give all sky diffraction limit at 0.5 mm, especially if placed on • Antarctic plateau (L2 of ground) • 25 m in Antarctica (Giant Magellan Telescope II) would rival JWST for spectroscopy • 100 m in Antarctic for terrestrial exoplanets • detection at 10 mm • spectroscopy in optical
AO will work well in Antarctica atmospheric turbulence mostly at low altitude, unlike temperate sites Figure 1. Atmospheric turbulence profiles projected for Dome C by Lawrence et al (2003).
Thermal good in Antarctica, though 10 micron background 105 higher GMT and JWST point source sensitivity for l>2.5 mm, 10s, 105 sec (Angel, Lawrence and Storey, 2003 Backaskog conference)
Next 50 years in space, beyond JWST • Unique space attributes are • No atmospheric absorption in UV, thermal IR • Pristine wavefront • No thermal emission if optics cold • Large, cold telescopes will outperform ground in UV/ thermal IR • Very big space telescopes with huge capital investment, like on ground telescopes should have multi decade lifetime, and be refitted every decade
Requirements for location • Far from Earth, to avoid its thermal radiation (for thermal telescope) • Accessible by astronauts as well as robots
Possible locations • LEO • Easiest for astronaut access • Warm, thermal cycling, reduced duty cycle • Re-boosts needed to maintain orbit • L2 • Cold, all sky access with 50% duty cycle • Hardest for astronaut access • Expendable fuel needed to maintain orbit • Pointing gyros subject to failure • Moon S pole • Cold, 100% duty cycle for 50% of sky • Astronauts nearby if base established • No expendables needed, no gyros • 3 x mass penalty if no established base
Requirements for longevity • stable orbit – avoid LEO and L2 • no gyros • no expendable cryogens • provision for occasional repair and upgrades by astronauts • long life against radiation damage • If our telescope is a million miles away, we may have trouble getting astronauts to visit. But if they are at a long term moon base, we should think about locating our telescope nearby
The moon as a telescope site • Basics fine • All wavelengths accessible, vacuum of space • Orbit stable on billion year timescale • Telescopes can be “safed” for decade and then brought back to service • Moon’s spin axis 1.5 degrees from ecliptic pole • Sun moves around within 1.5 degrees of horizon • Very low temperatures by simple shielding of sunlight
3x mass penalty to descend from lunar orbit • No air braking, as for Earth and Mars • Requires rocket • Apollo vehicle and fuel weighed 2½ times the payload mass delivered to surface • 18.3 tons rocket carried a payload of 7 tons (the fueled ascent stage and crew)
Telescope on moon makes sense if there is a long term, manned polar baseWhy the pole? • Frozen volatiles in permanently dark, cold craters • Ice can be recovered from regolith in craters • Ice converted to hydrogen/oxygen fuel by locally produced by solar power • Cryo storage of fuel • reusable ferry vehicle from surface to lunar orbit powered by local fuel - removes mass penalty
Polar base astronauts will need range of skills: • Install and maintain mining gear. Need to get > 0.5 km down 45 degree slope below crater rim to get permanently-shadowed ice-containing regolith • Install and maintain water extraction, photolysis and fuel storage equipment • Maintain reusable rocket ferry • Maintain atmospheric conditioning equipment • Grow plants using local water • Given these capabilities, assembling and maintaining 20 m telescopes would be present little additional challenge
Ice at south pole as measured by neutron flux (Lunar prospector)
Lunar Surveyor 1967 image of Shackleton crater at south pole (18 km diameter)
Sunshine available for nearly continuous solar power. Clementine map for lunar winter
Surrogate crater Dionysius* typical18 km crater but illuminated* sharp rim
Telescopes at S pole Don’t need to be in crater to be cold • Locate on rim far enough from base to avoid dust • sun moves around horizon, simple aluminized surrounding cylindrical screen will result in cooling to 40K or less • Lower screen to warm up for repairs • Three UV/O/IR flavors considered here • Fully steerable 16 m • 20 m zenith pointing ultra-deep survey filled aperture • Zenith-pointing wide-field interferometer
Pierre Bely’s 1990 concept for 16 m lunar telescope • Hexapod mount • 6 variable length legs pre-manufactured on Earth • low mass • no heavy foundation or bearing surfaces required • No gyros • Instruments shielded under regolith igloo • Advantage over L2: • No gyros, no fuel for orbit correction • Astronauts nearby
S pole lunar telescope sees same southern sky as Antarctic telescopes Most terrestrial planet candidates < 5 pc visible from lunar S pole!
Zenith-pointing telescopes and interferometers • Zenith traces out 3º degree diameter circle adjacent to LMC, over 18 year period • Fixed telescope, optics to steer field 1.5º off-axis, 6 degree field accessible • Could use optics panels from Earth, or liquid mirror Ecliptic pole imaged in uv from moon by Apollo astronauts. 6 degree circle around ecliptic pole
20 m liquid mirror telescope on superconducting bearing • Lunar liquid mirror telescope proposed by Borra ~ 1990 • Unique to Moon – needs gravity • 2 rpm for 20 m focal length • Use with liquid of low vapor pressure, vacuum deposited metallic coating (1-butene) • 20 m aperture on same field 24 hr/day for a year • This is the ultimate deep field • Imaging and multi-object spectrograph
Eisenstein and Gillespie estimates for first stars in this deep field • Lyman alpha flux to be about 1 nJy at z=25 and R=1000 for a 100 M star. • Scales linearly with the star's mass • equivalent photons for neutral helium can't pass through the IGM • Individual stars should be imageable in HeII line at 1640 A • Flux about 10% of the Lyman alpha line (i.e. 0.1 nJy)
Spinning liquid mirrors on Earth limited to ~ 6 m by self-generated wind - no such size limit on Moon 6 m, zenith pointing spinning mercury mirror, by Paul Hickson. Comet image from earlier prototype above
Imaging zenith pointing interferometer • Fizeau combination (wide field) will work well with no moving parts • Moon rotation ideal for zenith observation
conclusions • For 20 m class space telescopes, longevity of decades highly desirable • Possibility of astronaut access for assembly and robot back-up also highly desirable • If a long term polar moon base is established, then an observatory nearby makes a lot of sense • Locally fueled ferry to lunar orbit will remove mass penalty • Long term base only tolerated if operating cost <1/4 NASA budget (< $4B/yr), say 1 visit/year