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Fluidic Telescope (FLUTE): Enabling the Next Generation of Large Space Observatories

FLUTE

The future of space-based UV/optical/IR astronomy requires ever larger telescopes. The highest priority astrophysics targets, including Earth-like exoplanets, first generation stars, and early galaxies, are all very faint, which presents a challenge for current and next generation telescopes. Larger telescopes are the primary (if not only) way to address this issue. With mission costs depending strongly on aperture diameter, scaling current space telescope technologies to aperture sizes exceeding 10 meters does not appear economically viable. Without a breakthrough in scalable technologies for larger telescopes, future advances in astrophysics will slow down or even stall.

The FLUTE (Fluidic Telescope) project proposes to overcome the current scaling limitations for space optics via a novel approach  based on fluidic shaping in microgravity. This technique has already been successfully demonstrated in a laboratory neutral buoyancy environment, in parabolic microgravity flights, and aboard the International Space Station (ISS). Theoretically scale-invariant, this technique has produced optical components with superb, sub-nanometer surface quality.  In this presentation, Dr Edward Balaban will present the results to date and outline the work in progress, including FLUTE mission concepts currently under development that may enable the Next Generation of Large Space Observatories!

Speaker: Edward Balaban, NASA Ames

Friday, 11/01/24

Contact:

Website: Click to Visit

Cost:

Free

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