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- <text id=92TT0894>
- <title>
- Apr. 27, 1992: Shoot for the Stars
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Apr. 27, 1992 The Untold Story of Pan Am 103
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 56
- Shoot for the Stars
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A fresh generation of telescopes will open a new era of
- astronomical discovery
- </p>
- <p>By J. Madeleine Nash/Tucson
- </p>
- <p> Twleve summers ago, University of Arizona astronomer
- Roger Angel swung by a Tucson pottery shop to pick up some
- firebricks for a backyard kiln. Then he purchased some glass
- ovenware at a nearby hardware store. A few days later, he
- materialized in a graduate student's doorway, brandishing a
- couple of Pyrex custard dishes melted to a misshapen blob. "We
- can make telescope mirrors out of this!" Angel exclaimed. Thus
- began a monumental and quixotic effort to reinvent the central
- light-gathering surface of the telescope, from its initial
- design to its final polishing.
- </p>
- <p> This month, many years and millions of dollars later, that
- effort culminated in a spectacular success: the casting of one
- of the world's largest telescope mirrors, a single 6.5-m
- (21-ft.) circle of glass that sometime in 1994 will be hauled
- by flatbed truck to the top of Arizona's Mount Hopkins, where
- it will tilt skyward like a giant Cyclopean eye.
- </p>
- <p> These are heady days in the rarefied world of telescope
- making. Not since the 1934 casting of Mount Palomar's 5-m mirror--a record size at the time--has there been more innovation
- or competition to push the edge of possibility. In the clear air
- above Hawaii's Mauna Kea, the Keck I Telescope's mammoth 10-m
- mirror, built of 36 separate segments, is nearing final assembly--a 10-month process was completed last week. Four years from
- now it will be joined by the Keck II, an equally monstrous twin.
- By then, the European Southern Observatory hopes to have
- positioned the first of four 8.2-m telescopes atop a high peak
- in the Chilean Andes. Japanese astronomers and other groups
- around the world will be constructing telescopes of similar size
- and daring before the end of the century.
- </p>
- <p> Collectively, this new generation of ground-based
- instruments will open an extraordinary new window on the cosmos.
- "What we can look forward to," says Caltech astronomer Maarten
- Schmidt, "is the biggest gain in telescope power in the past 50,
- maybe even 100 years." It should bring into focus the most
- distant quasars yet and even planets orbiting other stars.
- </p>
- <p> The intellectual seeds for this technological renaissance
- were sown more than a decade ago, when Angel and a handful of
- other pioneers began contemplating the challenge of building
- more powerful telescopes. Very quickly, they were forced to
- consider radical new approaches to mirror design. Simply scaling
- up old models would have been hopelessly expensive and unwieldy.
- "A large mirror can't look like a small mirror," explains
- Angel, "for pretty much the same reason that an elephant can't
- look like a fly. If it did, its legs would collapse under its
- own weight."
- </p>
- <p> The central conundrum confronting designers was this: how
- to make a telescope mirror that could hold its shape against
- gravitational sag and gusting winds yet retain the capacity to
- make rapid adjustments to fluctuating temperatures. As mirror
- size increases, these two requirements begin to dictate
- different, and quickly contradictory, solutions. Very thick
- mirrors resist physical deformation extremely well, but because
- they retain so much heat, they tend to generate shimmering
- currents in the cold night air that play havoc with astronomers'
- observations. Very thin mirrors, on the other hand, have ideal
- thermal properties but a daunting physical handicap: as the
- telescope pans across the sky, a thin mirror will bend and
- wobble as if made of rubber.
- </p>
- <p> Between this Scylla and Charybdis, mirror designers are
- charting a variety of bold, new courses. By designing the Keck
- Telescope mirror as a mosaic of small segments, each the size
- of a dining-room table, astronomer Jerry Nelson of the
- University of California, Berkeley was able to make his mirrors
- both rigid and thin. But to provide images of pinprick
- sharpness, each segment must be kept perfectly aligned with its
- neighbors, a task handled by an elaborate electronic network.
- </p>
- <p> By contrast, the mirrors designed for the European
- Southern Observatory consist of a single, vast expanse of glass,
- thin (17.7 cm) and very flexible. To control wobbling and
- stabilize the orientation, these mirrors, like giant catcher's
- mitts, will be constantly readjusted by 180 computer-activated
- steel "fingers." A prototype mirror has already proved its
- worth. A flaw identical to the one that crippled the Hubble
- Space Telescope was easily corrected by adjusting the mirror's
- shape.
- </p>
- <p> Angel's approach relies less on intricate control systems
- and more on vitreous wizardry. The 10-ton mirror he and his
- colleagues plan to install in Arizona--merely a warm-up for
- some 8-m versions--boasts a light-collecting surface that is
- nearly as wide as a house is tall, yet it averages only 2.8 cm
- thick. What prevents this marvel from fracturing under its own
- weight is a supporting truss composed of thousands of glass ribs
- that are cast as part of the mirror's underlying structure.
- Arrayed in a striking hexagonal pattern, the ribs form an airy
- honeycomb that confers on the mirror the structural strength of
- solid glass at one-fifth the weight. Because the hexagonal cells
- are hollow, air can be circulated through them to keep the
- mirror in constant thermal balance.
- </p>
- <p> Although the conceptual design appears straightforward,
- the casting of a honeycomb mirror requires considerable
- technical know-how--and time. Angel's team tackles the job in
- their hangar-like mirror lab located, improbably enough, under
- the stands of the University of Arizona football stadium. In
- the center of the lab is a huge round furnace. To make a
- mirror, a complex ceramic mold is assembled inside the furnace
- and filled with glittering chunks of Pyrex-type glass. Once the
- furnace lid is sealed, the temperature will slowly ratchet up
- over a period of several days, at times rising no more than 2
- degrees C in an hour. At 750 degrees C (1382 degrees F), when
- the glass is a smooth, shiny lake, the furnace starts to whirl
- like a merry-go-round--an innovation that automatically spins
- the glass into the parabolic shape traditionally achieved by
- grinding. At about 1150 degrees C, the liquid glass oozes into
- the mold, filling the cells of the honeycomb.
- </p>
- <p> Cooling the mirror is an equally painstaking process that
- takes many weeks. Reason: if one section of the glass cools
- faster than another, it will contract more quickly, creating
- stresses that lead to cracking. When finally unmolded, the
- mirror will still require months of tedious polishing to remove
- any imperfections.
- </p>
- <p> Why devote so much time and energy to increasing the size
- of telescope mirrors? The quest is driven by science. To
- understand how the universe evolved from the Big Bang to its
- present form, astronomers strive to capture ever more fleeting
- flecks of light that emanated from ancient galaxies billions of
- years ago. A 10-m mirror increases their chances by providing
- a light-gathering surface that is four times the area of a 5-m
- mirror. Even bigger gains will be possible if astronomers
- proceed with plans to link huge telescopes like the Keck I and
- Keck II together, combining their light-catching power. The laws
- of physics serendipitously ensure that such telescopic arrays
- will also provide sharper images--if spatial distortions in
- the new thinner mirrors can only be held to a minimum.
- </p>
- <p> Of course, that is a big if. All the new mirror designs
- are pushing the technological frontier, and already some
- surprisingly nettlesome problems have arisen. "Naturally, the
- challenges have come in places we least expected them," says
- physicist Terry Mast, one of the scientists who is helping build
- the Keck Telescope. For instance, the laborious procedure
- developed for polishing the Keck's 36 mirror segments turned out
- to warp them. A system of special harnesses has now been
- developed to bend the segments to the correct curvature. So far,
- Angel's mirrors appear to be free of serious problems, though
- concerns persist that the honeycomb structure could interfere
- with "seeing" by leaving a subtle quilted pattern on the
- surface. Far outweighing any potential negatives, Angel
- believes, is the fact that his mirrors, unlike the Keck and
- European mirrors, do not require fancy computerized controls to
- keep them optimally configured. "When we succeed in casting a
- mirror," says Angel, "we've produced a piece of glass that makes
- everything else easy."
- </p>
- <p> Right now, which design will prove best is anyone's guess.
- "We'll know in 50 years," says Mast. But whatever the ultimate
- outcome of this ethereal competition, it is clear that Angel's
- creative hand will shape telescopes built for many years to
- come. He and a team of graduate students are among many
- astronomers racing to devise an "adaptive optics" system that
- corrects for the turbulence of the earth's atmosphere. The
- system affords ground-based instruments the heady illusion of
- operating in the clairvoyant emptiness of space. Angel, in other
- words, is on the verge of endowing his telescope mirrors with
- wings.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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