Science
Related: About this forumArecibo is getting decommissioned
NSF begins planning for decommissioning of Arecibo Observatorys 305-meter telescope due to safety concerns.
https://www.nsf.gov/news/news_summ.jsp?cntn_id=301674#.X7afajgoo88.twitter
The decision comes after NSF evaluated multiple assessments by independent engineering companies that found the telescope structure is in danger of a catastrophic failure and its cables may no longer be capable of carrying the loads they were designed to support. Furthermore, several assessments stated that any attempts at repairs could put workers in potentially life-threatening danger. Even in the event of repairs going forward, engineers found that the structure would likely present long-term stability issues.
Well that sucks. Thanks again 2020.
Maybe we could seriously consider building a radio telescope on the far side of the moon now?
nykym
(3,063 posts)Mulder going to do now?
wcmagumba
(3,308 posts)C_U_L8R
(45,843 posts)wcmagumba
(3,308 posts)Mersky
(5,336 posts)BootinUp
(49,209 posts)Sneederbunk
(15,482 posts)It was a big deal.
hunter
(39,116 posts)I don't like 2020 U.S.A..
eppur_se_muova
(37,867 posts)Under this maladministration, we have to suspect this is the consequence of the relentless rejection of science -- including starvation funding.
CloudWatcher
(1,947 posts)I was certainly prepared to flame Trump about this, but then this line caught my eye:
So the bottom line is that they don't know how bad it is, can't properly model what they've got, and can't even find out without putting people's lives at risk. Just taking it apart (before it collapses on its own) will be a challenge.
If there was more time, perhaps robots could be used and better models could be developed, but it sounds like everyone is spooked because the engineering models don't match reality.
It would be nice if they could tear it down and replace it there, but I don't know how much sense that makes from a science perspective.
Javaman
(63,221 posts)the loss of the radio telescope really saddens me.
I hope a replacement or as someone else suggested in this threat a RT on the moon.
CloudWatcher
(1,947 posts)A radio telescope on the far side of the moon makes enormous sense because the moon would block almost all of the man-made radio signals that pollute observations from Earth-based telescopes.
And now that everyone and their cousins are putting up hundreds of communications satellites in low-earth orbit (for internet access from anywhere), the situation is going from bad to ridiculous.
From https://astrobites.org/2020/09/25/leosats/
And if that wasn't enough reason, a radio telescope on the moon (or in space) would also allow observations at frequencies below 30MHz ... which are reflected by the Earth's ionosphere, essentially blocking ground-based scopes from working.
A couple links ...
https://www.nasa.gov/directorates/spacetech/niac/2020_Phase_I_Phase_II/lunar_crater_radio_telescope/
https://bgr.com/2020/04/09/moon-crater-telescope-nasa-concept/
I think sending people to Mars is nuts (because of the radiation problems), but building a scope on moon is a great idea