NASA's Plan to Build A Telescope on the Moon

2023 ж. 8 Қыр.
1 133 564 Рет қаралды

Try Onshape for free: Onshape.pro/RealEngineering
Watch this video ad free on Nebula: nebula.tv/videos/realengineer...
Links to everything I do:
beacons.ai/brianmcmanus
Get your Real Engineering shirts at: standard.tv/collections/real-...
Credits:
Writer/Narrator: Brian McManus
Writer: Josi Gold
Editor: Dylan Hennessy
Animator: Mike Ridolfi
Animator: Riley Brown
Animator: Eli Prenten
Modeling and Animations: Volodymyr Vustyansky
Sound: Graham Haerther
Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster
Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images
Thank you to AP Archive for access to their archival footage.
Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com/creator
Thank you to my patreon supporters: Abdullah Alotaibi, Adam Flohr, Henning Basma, Hank Green, William Leu, Tristan Edwards, Ian Dundore, John & Becki Johnston. Nevin Spoljaric, Jason Clark, Thomas Barth, Johnny MacDonald, Stephen Foland, Alfred Holzheu, Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Binghaith, Brent Higgins, Dexter Appleberry, Alex Pavek, Marko Hirsch, Mikkel Johansen, Hibiyi Mori. Viktor Józsa, Ron Hochsprung

Пікірлер
  • "Supporting a 200 kilogram telescope on the moon is equivalent to holding just about 320 kg on Earth" Am I stupid or does this sentence makes no sense?

    @stringsofconsciousness4202@stringsofconsciousness42028 ай бұрын
    • We had an audio fix recorded, looks like it wasn’t added

      @RealEngineering@RealEngineering8 ай бұрын
    • Was supposed to be 2000 kg. I just read it wrong without realizing.

      @RealEngineering@RealEngineering8 ай бұрын
    • @@RealEngineering how can you read 2000 as 320 also 1 minute ago

      @petterlarsson7257@petterlarsson72578 ай бұрын
    • ​@@petterlarsson7257Can read 200 as 2000.

      @heidirabenau511@heidirabenau5118 ай бұрын
    • @@petterlarsson7257Daddy chill

      @tozrimondher4250@tozrimondher42508 ай бұрын
  • I had the privilege of working on this at JPL with a tiny but dedicated team and you've done an incredible job of summarizing the project! Really glad that super cool proposals like LCRT are getting more attention thanks to your awesome work. We need public support to turn today's crazy ideas into tomorrow's missions!

    @aeroalessandro@aeroalessandro8 ай бұрын
    • A monstrous waste of money! Only two good Space endeavors so far: weather satellites, and detecting/deflecting asteroids heading towards Earth. All else is human hubris.

      @gerryboudreaultboudreault2608@gerryboudreaultboudreault26088 ай бұрын
    • ​@@gerryboudreaultboudreault2608 coronal mass ejections, exo planets, exo moons, study of supernovas, gamma ray busters, cosmic microwave background radiation, rogue planets, black holes. All pretty relevent to humanitys potential future extinction or survival..and worthy of study.

      @ajctrading@ajctrading8 ай бұрын
    • No. You didn't.

      @stageiii1@stageiii18 ай бұрын
    • What if a single anchor fails to anchor? Will the entire crater been ruined? And what if the power source dies? There is a replacement planned? (like shooting a power cable so a future rover can plug into the cable, and feed energy to the telescope).

      @BongoFerno@BongoFerno7 ай бұрын
    • Must feel pretty awesome doing something that sounds like science fiction but isn't.

      @vigilantcosmicpenguin8721@vigilantcosmicpenguin87217 ай бұрын
  • Now we’re talking. This is a badass idea that is actually pretty feasible. Difficult but way more feasible than mars plans.

    @Turdfergusen382@Turdfergusen3828 ай бұрын
    • Both are not feasible at all. Satellite on the moon is a ludicrous idea and the Mars plans are straight up retarded

      @Alphoric@Alphoric8 ай бұрын
    • Yes - or could instrument the moon so that asteroids can be detected earlier and destroyed/diverted.

      @msulemanf@msulemanf8 ай бұрын
    • @@msulemanfyou have a very limited section of the sky with this. This asteroid business can be done much easier. It just needs more funding.

      @Thisandthat8908@Thisandthat89088 ай бұрын
    • You need almost the same delta v for Luna orbit as for Mars orbit. And Mars is for more habitable than Luna. It doesn't have razor sharp dust for one.

      @brll5733@brll57338 ай бұрын
    • Yes, and once the moon has gotten it's own manufacturing industry, a lot of cool stuff could be constructed.

      @petterbirgersson4489@petterbirgersson44898 ай бұрын
  • I am amazed at how much CAD has changed. In the late 90s, after Hollywood had rendered graphics like those in The Matrix, I was learning AutoCAD commands and being told that was what the industry used. Now you can throw together a few variables to generate a gear automatically, the click on parts of it to refine it and send it to a printer within minutes.

    @Merennulli@Merennulli8 ай бұрын
    • Exponential technological growth. Computers being pretty much the first widely applicable technology that can be used directly to improve future iterations of the technology.

      @golf398@golf3988 ай бұрын
    • Printed materials suck tho and they still need to be machined to tolerance after printing. Machined from solid block is more expensive, but still the way to go for precision high stress and wear parts that need to be made out of the thoughest alloys and with the best heat treatment possible. Like gears for example. Unless you talk about printed throw away plastic toys ofc, for those printing gets them from raw material into the trash bin much quicker then regular manufacturing methods :D

      @hernerweisenberg7052@hernerweisenberg70528 ай бұрын
    • @@hernerweisenberg70523D printing is primarily for prototyping, but we are way past the era where 3D prints were inherently trash quality. They literally print working 3D rocket parts now, and one company (Relativity Space) even printed an entire rocket that achieved MaxQ on its first test (not a complete success, but better than a lot of conventionally built rockets have done on their first test launch). Also, a LOT of finished products use plastic gears and have long before 3D printing - notably including 2D printers. You use the material that makes the most sense for your product, and often that's plastic.

      @Merennulli@Merennulli8 ай бұрын
    • @@pyropulseIXXIyou wrong

      @sr4087@sr40878 ай бұрын
    • @@hernerweisenberg7052 Most printers that regular people can afford print okay-ish to pretty good, but industrial 3D printers can hit some pretty tight tolerances and make very good/precise parts. I think its #1 application in industry is probably prototyping but that is changing as there are many final products with 3D printed components these days. Depending on the application its often good enough. I work at a particle physics facility and we have several types of filament that are radiation hardened. Its very useful for making small parts, like brackets or instrument holders, quickly and cheaply. Most plastics turn brittle when exposed to ionizing radiation and metal parts are relatively difficult, time-consuming and expensive to make, so being able to 3D print parts in kapton or PEEK plastic is a game changer. Both types are also suitable for use in vacuum though in practice, its almost impossible to print in such a way that there is no trapped air and we cant set up a printer inside a vacuum chamber (it overheats/a box big enough to hold the printer is impractical). Yes its best to use metal for the applications you mentioned, but so many applications don't need to be machined/CNCd where a 3D printed part is good enough and usually more precise/way cheaper than injection molding plastic parts.

      @Teesquared00@Teesquared008 ай бұрын
  • Currently reading the Expanse and when they were talking about the Moon they mention how a giant telescope was one of the first things built there, crazy to think we're kind of (yet again) following along with good sci-fi. Exciting times

    @booth403@booth4038 ай бұрын
    • Life imitates art. But, to be fair, this concept has been around for a long time, so I assume that's where the author got the idea. Art imitates life.

      @bjrn-oskarrnning2740@bjrn-oskarrnning27408 ай бұрын
    • Yeah realistically sci-fi popularise the ideas but following along with real scientific ideas that are already well known.

      @Bbouy1HD@Bbouy1HD8 ай бұрын
    • I'm still mad the show "The Expanse" didn't cover the last books.

      @Z3t487@Z3t4877 ай бұрын
    • @@Z3t487 The time skip made it prohibitively expensive, but I've read in a few places that they might come back to it and that the main actors have hinted that they'd be down. We'll have to wait 5-10 years but I think that's fine in the name of accuracy.

      @booth403@booth4037 ай бұрын
    • @@booth403 It would be awesome! Thanks for your message.

      @Z3t487@Z3t4877 ай бұрын
  • Props to the camera crew that flys out there to the webb and gets all the B roll shots

    @nickmudd@nickmudd8 ай бұрын
    • They are paid a *lot* extra!

      @DrunkenUFOPilot@DrunkenUFOPilot8 ай бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂😂😂

      @mk_ultra3729@mk_ultra37297 ай бұрын
    • nasa art department is an amazing job

      @allenlark@allenlark3 ай бұрын
    • Cameraman always survives!

      @liquidpatriot4480@liquidpatriot44803 ай бұрын
  • That is no moon. That is a space station.

    @night_aviation@night_aviation4 ай бұрын
  • If I ever hear anything about this through the usual channels, I would happily sign on to be on the front end team for the telescope. It'd be a fun upgrade from the VLA where I currently work in the front end group and a fun alternative to the south pole telescope. Also at 6:59 that's rob Long, my boss, and Craig, who retired in 2021 and whose position I took over. Concerning the redshift of hydrogen line emission from the early universe, that's something I'm a part of the low band team on. One of the main authors of a few papers on this search have been studying the redshift values as well as the difficulties of eliminating foreground radiation to determine post ground state emission data. Which, if it does eventually pan out, can reveal the process of collapse and consolidation of the larger regions of hydrogen from the ground state relaxation period to the earliest stars. Finally, I know those videos from the VLA all come from the nrao video about the VLA and is a few years old. But I love the use of that footage and seeing my coworkers on screen lol. Thanks for those little touches. The VLA is getting funded for the NgVLA which will be 246 different antennas stretched out over most of the southwest and I'm really excited to be a part of that.

    @StormsandSaugeye@StormsandSaugeye8 ай бұрын
    • Great short comment ! Visit the VLA in the rocket friendly state of New Mexico (NM)-call ahead for tour times... Also the First Radio Map of the galaxy was produced from an antenna in Wheaton, Illinois ! Timothy Lipinski

      @TimothyLipinski@TimothyLipinski7 ай бұрын
    • @TimothyLipinski yeah I work at the VLA lol.

      @StormsandSaugeye@StormsandSaugeye7 ай бұрын
  • from crane and plane origamis to space exploration telescope origamis... humanity has come a long way

    @MasayaShida@MasayaShida8 ай бұрын
    • We are living in the best time we could possibly be in. A dark past and a grim future, yet we were so lucky to be born in the perfect time.

      @Litkeen@Litkeen8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Litkeennope. AI is taking over jobs man. What's the use of living jobless.

      @xiaoshen194@xiaoshen1948 ай бұрын
    • @@xiaoshen194 If AI comes to a point where it can take a significant amount of jobs, then the government would block it's spread. Alternatively they will make UBI, so everyone will be entitled to free money for not working.

      @Litkeen@Litkeen8 ай бұрын
    • One small fold for man, one giant leap for Origami

      @BenitoAndito@BenitoAndito8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@xiaoshen194 also creating new jobs, is the same history of all, of the new inventions

      @cesarcaballero7687@cesarcaballero76878 ай бұрын
  • The animations in this video are amazing

    @Nick-rp2jg@Nick-rp2jg8 ай бұрын
    • Pronouncing ESA as E.S.A…. also amazing….😅

      @remi_gio@remi_gio8 ай бұрын
  • Its fascinating how we went from calling ideas like this outrageous to actually considering them. Absolutely amazing

    @4_real_bruh@4_real_bruh8 ай бұрын
    • Just shows what happens when your break people's mind with lies. Ridiculous ideas that are fictional are seen as real.

      @mgallus@mgallus8 ай бұрын
    • Truly, I don't recall that word...outrageous...ever being used. For a century we've been slow and lazy. Should have had a starship by now.

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
    • ​@@derrickcox7761 Should? You watch too many movies.

      @100c0c@100c0c8 ай бұрын
    • @@mgalluslies? such as?

      @poindextertunes@poindextertunes8 ай бұрын
    • @poindextertunes well that there was a live broadcast from the moon dispite with the tech the said they used lacked the power to do so. The film they used would have been destroyed due to the heat and cold of space not to mention the radiation that destroys the film. Buzz Aldren adimted that people watched movie magic and not them on the moon. Shall I go on?

      @mgallus@mgallus8 ай бұрын
  • Is it possible to do a mini series (or just a single video) about composites? The history, manufacturing, different methods, difference from yachts to space craft. Design requirements, resin chemistry etc. I find it all very interesting and I'm sure others would do too. Think you mentioned in your ocean gate video that you did composites for your degree/ masters so I'm sure you'll do great. Thanks!

    @willwright8066@willwright80668 ай бұрын
  • If you're trying to get a handle on LCRT's improvement, based only on size (and not on lunar location), "50 meters greater than Arecibo" means LCRT will have a 135% larger surface than Arecibo (which is probably why RE didn't state this)

    @TheLookingOne@TheLookingOne8 ай бұрын
    • And it should remain intact without maintenance for a whole lot longer because Luna has no air and minimal gravity - well played, NASA.

      @HowlingWolf518@HowlingWolf5188 ай бұрын
    • You can compensate for area with exposure time - 135% of area means the same amount of light collected in 74% of the time, or 135% as many "pictures" per lunar day, or however you want to look at it. A greater motivation for a larger telescope tends to be that the diameter drives its *resolution.* A 135% larger telescope can resolve features (stars, moons, sunspots, continents, dense spots in a hydrogen cloud, etc.) that are spaced 74% as far apart as the closest features that the smaller telescope could resolve. That's assuming all things being equal like the atmosphere or lack of, the receiver, the proper geometry of the reflector, and so on.

      @fowlerj111@fowlerj1118 ай бұрын
    • @@HowlingWolf518it gets bombarded by meteorites at a shocking rate. It has been hit on something like 100% of the surface. So much so that the ground material is pulverized into a uniquely structured material found only in extremely high energy collisions.

      @noahkolodziejski2427@noahkolodziejski24278 ай бұрын
    • @@noahkolodziejski2427 Right, but that 100% was over billions of years. Apparently the chance of actually being hit by a lunar micrometeor is about 1 in 1 million per hour.

      @HowlingWolf518@HowlingWolf5188 ай бұрын
    • @@HowlingWolf518 But that’s for a single person, with less than 1 square meter of cross section. What’s the cross sectional area of the telescope? 1 year is 8700 hours, so in the smallest possible area you can pack ~120 humans (5 m x 5 m), a 45,000 mph rock will impact once per year. That’s a LOT. Look at what a 1/2 oz plastic did to aluminum armor at 15000 mph, then multiply the energy by 9.

      @noahkolodziejski2427@noahkolodziejski24278 ай бұрын
  • I am currently working on my final year thesis as graduate in physics. Your videos always inspire me. Thank you

    @heroyt2490@heroyt24908 ай бұрын
    • May you fail incredibly 😊

      @vice-108@vice-1088 ай бұрын
    • You have my respect, and goodluck towards finding a great career that doesn't ask you to forget proven science because it offends somebody

      @thelonewrangler1008@thelonewrangler10088 ай бұрын
    • ​@@vice-108?

      @heidirabenau511@heidirabenau5118 ай бұрын
    • @@vice-108 just like you did in your life? and that's how you're always negative.

      @toheedh@toheedh8 ай бұрын
    • @@toheedh Lmfao gotem

      @mastershooter64@mastershooter648 ай бұрын
  • Knowing NASA, this will only take 458 years

    @dmurray2978@dmurray29788 ай бұрын
    • Oh ok ok, you go ahead then

      @clemente3@clemente315 күн бұрын
  • Great video! For anyone curious, you actually dont want a dish thats a half circle/sphere either (google spherical aberration). The best shape, with minimal to no abberation, would be a hyperbolic curve, if not that then a parabolic curve, and if not that then comes spherical curve. However, some amount and types of aberation can be corrected for by subsequent reflectors in the reciever and/or woth fancy signal processing.

    @maxk4324@maxk43243 ай бұрын
  • Given that the JWST already was hit by a meteoroid, I am more concerned about the challenges of how to protect that telescope from impact of space debris as well as radiation damage to its (electronic) systems.

    @ashemedai@ashemedai8 ай бұрын
    • Hardening electronics from radiation is something we're more than used to by now so it's hardly a concern that can't be accounted for. As for space debris/damage, we're going back to the moon. There will be people stationed there, future repairs are far more feasible for a moon based telescope than for the JWST (which is never going to be visited for a repair).

      @DCTriv@DCTriv8 ай бұрын
    • An estimated 33000 meteoroids hit the moon every year. The dish would have an area of 0.38 km^2 compared to the moon's total 38 million km^2. So a probability of 0.00033 that it would get hit during its first year of operation by something "pingpong ball sized or larger".

      @katzen3314@katzen33148 ай бұрын
    • The telescope is a mesh not a solid mirror so most of the time small debris would fly right though it.

      @massimocole9689@massimocole96898 ай бұрын
    • The dish will be a mesh with holes of several meters. There is more empty space than actual structure. The chance of something important getting hit is very small.

      @Magnatron13@Magnatron138 ай бұрын
    • Moondust. It's all about moondust. This stuff is a nightmare for any mechanics or electronics. To my knowledge, we don't yet have a concept for a solution.

      @rudolfgernd8760@rudolfgernd87608 ай бұрын
  • "I'm gonna go get the papers, get the papers."

    @hamentaschen@hamentaschen8 ай бұрын
    • Hey Tony two-times, go get your effin shine box!😂

      @thelonewrangler1008@thelonewrangler10088 ай бұрын
    • Here for this reference 😅

      @anieudo5359@anieudo53598 ай бұрын
  • 10:10 : That is not correctly phrased. The cosmic microwave background (CMB) is actually very homogenous at first order. Its temperature is 2.7255±0.0006 K on the whole sky! The fluctuations are of the order ot micro-Kelvins. And those very small spatial temperature inhomogeneities (we call them CMB anisotropies) were actually predicted by physicists after the first introduction of the CMB idea. It was never a surprise when we first saw them! The theoretical prediction of the CMB anisotropies are actually exactly why we started to launch more and more precise satellites, starting in 1992, to better observe those anisotropies, and to constraint the cosmological model. That is why we know so much about the universe amount of dark matter, dark energy, the age of the universe, its curvature, its expansion, and so on...

    @TheDarkYnder@TheDarkYnder8 ай бұрын
    • I scrolled for waaay too long to find someone mention this. When I heard that in the video, I immediately thought "What the hell is this guy talking about?". If anything, the CMB observations proved that it's is pretty uniform and the universe is flat.

      @D1ndo@D1ndo8 ай бұрын
  • There's a near-future, hard scifi manga called Space Brothers where they build a radio telescope in a crater on the far side of the moon. It is an array of detector posts arranged in a 3-arm spiral with initial delivery of the posts done from orbit and then the crew and the helper bots connect them together. I highly recommend it, it's a satisfying and optimistic astronaut drama with no real antagonists.

    @zaygr@zaygr8 ай бұрын
  • I'm procrastinating finishing my thesis on mesh antenna force optimisation, and then I see the thumbnail. Love the video and the concept!

    @EvocativeKitsune@EvocativeKitsune8 ай бұрын
    • And there went your thesis?

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • The cost comparison is funny given that JWST was originally estimated at little over 3 billion

    @ErikB605@ErikB6058 ай бұрын
    • If we choose to build this, hopefully we can do it without the cost overruns JWST suffered

      @dx-ek4vr@dx-ek4vr8 ай бұрын
    • ​@@dx-ek4vr Good one.

      @elliotgillum@elliotgillum8 ай бұрын
  • Hell yeah, onshape! Absolutely my favorite cad program, I’m so happy to find out you use it as well!

    @cameronscott701@cameronscott7018 ай бұрын
  • I was about to comment on 7:08, but then I saw it's the most replayed part of the vid and there's also a pinned comment about it. It makes me happy that the audience of the channel is engaged and picks up on stuff like that. Kudos to you all.

    @AlkisGD@AlkisGD8 ай бұрын
  • If we can figure out the mechanics of this telescoop then we can also make solararrays with the same technique. Deploying solararrays automatically from orbit near potential colonies before astronauts arrive would give them power security.

    @matsdy3649@matsdy36498 ай бұрын
  • I remember reading of this from a manga named Uchuu Kyoudai (Space Brothers)

    @knasiotis1@knasiotis18 ай бұрын
  • "Except I'm not gonna build on the Earth. I'm gonna go higher, I'm building on the MOON. HOW DO YOU LIKE THAT, OBAMA"

    @pluspiping@pluspiping8 ай бұрын
  • Maybe there is an obvious reason why this isn't an option, but it seems to me like an Artemis Mission on a Lunar Starship might have an easier time with those tether cables. I didn't catch if he talked about mass estimates but even with a lander with equipment and then a crew with drills might be able to set it up in a week or two. Rather than the complicated launcher spider

    @alejandrocapell2780@alejandrocapell27808 ай бұрын
    • No reason why it isn't an option except continuing to pretend HLS Starship doesn't exist. The second Starship test flight could launch within the next month pending FAA approval.

      @SecretRaginMan@SecretRaginMan8 ай бұрын
    • He mentioned that a crewed mission would be a few billion dollars more expensive than a single lander with projectile anchors. Yes, it's higher risk to not send a crew, but when you're having to spend billions more dollars to mitigate the risk, sometimes it's better to try and account for it in other ways.

      @drakedbz@drakedbz8 ай бұрын
    • @@drakedbz He didn't mention crew at all, because the JPL study didn't mention it because they can't even conceive of it. If the Artemis landers especially Starship HLS prove their worth then it makes sense to use them, we will have the landers and the EVA suits and possibly large cargo rovers like Astrolabs which will all have been tried and tested at the South Pole, so the risk would largely be retired, we'd no doubt have some sort of lunar relay by then too, so no reason not to try for both the first ever manned landing on the lunar far side and the first ever large scale construction project on the moon in the same mission/s

      @planetsec9@planetsec98 ай бұрын
  • I was already impressed with the idea of building a telescope in a crater on the far side of the moon. But when he said it was going to be done with robots, I was floored. Its already difficult enough trying to accomplish this with astronauts, but creating robots that can intricately and accurately build this telescope from earth is a level above hard mode.

    @jonathanluna7955@jonathanluna79558 ай бұрын
    • It would be harder with astronauts, which is why they are doing robots.

      @waspsandwich6548@waspsandwich65488 ай бұрын
    • @@waspsandwich6548 No, it would be significantly easier. It takes far more effort to design and build a single-purpose robot that comes close to the ability of a human than to have a human do it. The reason astronauts will not be involved is purely because supporting astronauts for a long-term mission is ridiculously expensive, to the point that it would be completely infeasible with NASA's current budget.

      @none-ro9dz@none-ro9dz8 ай бұрын
    • @none-ro9dz that's what I mean by harder. As in, in the broad scale of the entire mission it's harder for astronauts to do it than for robots to

      @waspsandwich6548@waspsandwich65488 ай бұрын
    • Wikipedia says the apollo program cost the equivalent of 178 billion of today's US dollars. But that included 6 separate lunar landings, which means it was only 30 B$ per trip! I'm sure you can't count like that since they didn't start each mission from scratch. But on the other hand, this telescope project sounds so complicated that it would surely exceed its suggested 10B$ budget. So... what's the safer bet? Training a few astronauts and get them to the moon and back (something we have already done), or inventing a whole new yet reliable robotics system? Who knows.

      @volbla@volbla8 ай бұрын
    • @@none-ro9dz If only we stopped funding pointless wars and diverted those budgets to something actually meaningful. Such as space exploration.

      @Someguy6571@Someguy65718 ай бұрын
  • Imagine this actually gets deployed, everything works fine and than it's destroyed five minutes after by some random cosmic debree.

    @ColdyCZ@ColdyCZ8 ай бұрын
    • debris*

      @3nertia@3nertia8 ай бұрын
    • As he said, the mesh step should be smaller then the wavelength, which 6.5 meters. So, if it is done with, lets say, 6m step, there is a pretty good chance that some random cosmic debree will simply miss.

      @MSP_TechLab@MSP_TechLab8 ай бұрын
    • I’m pretty sure that’s why they wanted to see early on if they can alter the trajectory of rouge asteroids

      @somezsaltz6835@somezsaltz68358 ай бұрын
    • @@MSP_TechLab Yeah, but I'd imagine the center is a big and important target, would'nt be such an improbable target to hit. Especialy since the Moon has no atmosphere to burn down even the smallest debris which traveling at those speeds could cause a lot of damage (not even Flex Tape could fix that).

      @ColdyCZ@ColdyCZ8 ай бұрын
    • @@ColdyCZ I think, of course, probability will be higher. But danger of meteorites and space debris is over exaggerated by hollywood movies. So, I assume that much smarter people in NASA calculated such risk and decided that it is appropriate.

      @MSP_TechLab@MSP_TechLab8 ай бұрын
  • Got mostly through this once, just playing it in the background-but soon decided it needed to be seen again, with full attention. Yes, this is a video of that kind.

    @ronaldgarrison8478@ronaldgarrison84788 ай бұрын
  • I've been to Arecibo while in operation. Very inspiring place. Gardens below are nice as well. I'd love to see another one on the moon. It would be a learning place.

    @legion7193@legion71938 ай бұрын
    • You first. I'll buy you a freeze dried ice cream bar.

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • This is a really great idea, I really hope NASA go through and fund this 😍

    @emanuelescarsella3124@emanuelescarsella31248 ай бұрын
    • Me too.

      @Athena_208@Athena_2088 ай бұрын
    • Unfortunately, NASA doesn't fund anything. Congress does. 😕

      @thomashiggins9320@thomashiggins93208 ай бұрын
    • Dream on dreamers

      @Mr2twenty2@Mr2twenty28 ай бұрын
    • ​@@Mr2twenty2if this ever gets announced I will respond to this with something whitty but for now you're right

      @meowmeowmaxx@meowmeowmaxx8 ай бұрын
    • Good luck Starshine.

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • Anyone ever thought about putting, what is essentially a voyager probe, on object 1/2017 U1, and just waiting to see what it picks up, I mean it would take a while, but it would be very interesting, we could also just flying an asteroid, into an interstellar, overall trajectory, and then stick a voyager probe on to that.

    @nerdyPanda7288@nerdyPanda72888 ай бұрын
  • around 6:30 there are some small mistakes... the desired shape is not spherical but parabolical (this is common knowledge, you don't need to make it "easier" than it is). And the weight distribution to achieve that is the opposite of what you showed. it needs to be heavier in the middle, with a distribution of the form 1/sqrt(1+x^2). If they introduce crossings under tesion, like a spider web, than they could counteract that. The tension in the ring structures can even be easier to adjust (compared to weights) if something doesn't work as intended.

    @deinauge7894@deinauge78948 ай бұрын
  • Wow super interesting, just 2 minutes into the video and already love the topic, the presentation and the quality of the video :)

    @karavind7814@karavind78148 ай бұрын
  • As a kid, I always imagined the crater would be coated with a reflective material, but on reflection, this looks more feasible.

    @edgarwalk5637@edgarwalk56378 ай бұрын
    • How long has this been an idea?

      @ebonaparte3853@ebonaparte38534 ай бұрын
  • 8:27 There is a big problem with such estimates - they are always wrong. The initial cost for James Webb was $4 bln, but then has grown 2.5 times.

    @newkobra@newkobra8 ай бұрын
    • Was looking for this comment.. This whole project explanation is overly positive and sometimes a bit unrealistic. See alot of issues unsolved, so many room for errors as well. Alot more difficult than explained here and definitely not doable within a decade.

      @XpRnz@XpRnz8 ай бұрын
    • this will be either a spin off or extension to Artemis mission. If you never think through these possibilities, you never get them come true.

      @Denverian@Denverian8 ай бұрын
    • @@DenverianI'm not saying that we shouldn't do this. I believe that it's better for the world to invest money into space and medicine instead of weapon and war. Just wanted to note that this estimates are bullshit :)

      @newkobra@newkobra8 ай бұрын
  • Fascinating topic you covered. Excellent video like always 🎉

    @Aeiroq@Aeiroq8 ай бұрын
  • getting this telescope made would not only be incredibly useful, but would pave the way for making a liquid metal telescope on the moon as well

    @vincentgrinn2665@vincentgrinn26658 ай бұрын
  • Please make a video on the Extremely Large Telescope, its nearing completion!

    @nikl.astrophoto@nikl.astrophoto8 ай бұрын
    • Yes please!

      @skehleben7699@skehleben76998 ай бұрын
  • I support this project 100x more than a Mars Colony.

    @Dr.Kay_R@Dr.Kay_R8 ай бұрын
    • Why even comparing, makes no sense.

      @lore00star@lore00star8 ай бұрын
    • with permanent extra-terrestrial colonies missions like this will become a lot easier. we can use humans to help build more complex scientific instruments.

      @danilooliveira6580@danilooliveira65808 ай бұрын
    • Mars colony is the biggest waste of money ever. there's no reason to go there lmao. just a suicide mission. Moon base is like, better in every way.

      @Litkeen@Litkeen8 ай бұрын
    • Mars slavery

      @OH-STUNNER@OH-STUNNER8 ай бұрын
    • @@Litkeen unless Moon gravity is lethal and Mars gravity is livable. We don't really know where that cutoff point.

      @Paul_Bedford@Paul_Bedford8 ай бұрын
  • I grew up in the Virgin Islands, right next door to Puerto Rico. Watching Arecibo collapse was heart breaking...

    @Andlekin@Andlekin6 ай бұрын
  • Great idea, the volume and complexity indicates that this could happen after about 20 years from now.

    @jonnekjonneksson@jonnekjonneksson8 ай бұрын
  • Amazing work as always Can you explain the weight point you make at 7:05 If the Moon's Gravity is 16%, how is 200 kg equivalent to 320kg on earth ?

    @al-Zughal@al-Zughal8 ай бұрын
    • He probably meant 2000 kg

      @diacoal2433@diacoal24338 ай бұрын
    • The correct answer would be 32 kg so, it's probably just a decimal error

      @kinglink2248@kinglink22488 ай бұрын
    • He corrected himself in a comment, he meant 2000kg to 230kg

      @megarcher@megarcher8 ай бұрын
    • He meant to say 2000kg, rather than 200kg

      @yewo.m@yewo.m8 ай бұрын
    • The subtitles had 2000kg

      @idjles@idjles8 ай бұрын
  • Best idea NASA had in a loong time actually--- Specially if they combine that with a "permanent" Moonbase, servicing it!

    @mho...@mho...8 ай бұрын
    • with what money and what army?

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • Haven’t watched it and already liked! Love this channel man!

    @lewisbamford337@lewisbamford3378 ай бұрын
  • Like the Mars sky crane system it sounds crazy. I love it.

    @sidoney101@sidoney1018 ай бұрын
  • I always thought constructing a crater telescope would be something to do if you already have a large moonbase. But with only one lander it actually sounds plausible.

    @superkartoffel7479@superkartoffel74798 ай бұрын
    • When he was explaining all the challenges in doing it all on its own, I thought, NASA is sending men to the moon to stay. Let’s just wait until they are there, and have them construct it.

      @alphagt62@alphagt628 ай бұрын
    • The US government is trying to go to war with the Decepticons for the far side of the moon

      @chewielewis4002@chewielewis40028 ай бұрын
    • And pointless?

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • What an incredible idea! I would however just like to point out that the JWST originally was estimated to cost not nearly as much as it ended up costing in reality.

    @seantoomey1514@seantoomey15148 ай бұрын
    • I don't know if you can accurately predict how much a unique construction project on a body we don't inhabit will cost. That doesn't mean we shouldn't be careful with our budget. It does mean that Isaac Arthur was exactly right a few weeks ago when he said (paraphrasing) that if NASA were the sole organization developing space, they'd just build more telescopes.

      @iivin4233@iivin42338 ай бұрын
  • This is something that I thought of when the Arecibo went down. feels good to see people who actually know what they're talking about have similar ideas.

    @Wile-.E.-Coyote@Wile-.E.-Coyote8 ай бұрын
    • I counted...it's 13 people. Good luck.

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • for years now... i love this channel !

    @lucianolizana446@lucianolizana4467 ай бұрын
  • This would be a feat to see. I hope they go through with this and hopefully, we could see the fruits in our lifetimes.

    @Appl_Jax@Appl_Jax8 ай бұрын
  • Always comes up with a video no one expects, Respect !

    @user-yf2ky9ww9j@user-yf2ky9ww9j8 ай бұрын
    • It's all nonsense

      @gulfy09@gulfy098 ай бұрын
  • God bless you Real Engineering. What a delight you are.

    @joshuafedorchuk1257@joshuafedorchuk12578 ай бұрын
  • Interesting topic you presented and keep it up!!

    @gamereditor59ner22@gamereditor59ner228 ай бұрын
  • 7:04 not certain that math works out

    @xyz-xy5ym@xyz-xy5ym8 ай бұрын
    • Yeah, I heard it was a mistake and the fix never got added to the Final Cut

      @mr_pigman1013@mr_pigman10138 ай бұрын
    • Check pinned comment.

      @heidirabenau511@heidirabenau5118 ай бұрын
  • Lunar dust might be a big challenge for this project.

    @xxii_ix_xix_viii_xiv_xxi3889@xxii_ix_xix_viii_xiv_xxi38898 ай бұрын
    • no wind on the moon I think it's ok

      @looknamman@looknamman8 ай бұрын
    • In the construction phase, probably. But once the telescope is up and running, dust on the Moon shouldn't do much.

      @pingpong607@pingpong6078 ай бұрын
    • @@looknamman the moon has no atmosphere so all the space dust is still a problem, especially considering relative velocity

      @am_meep@am_meep8 ай бұрын
    • I don't know if dust covering the dish would actually have any impact. Is moon dust transparent at those wavelengths?

      @plainText384@plainText3848 ай бұрын
    • This was my first thought. Lunar regolith is an order of magnitude worse than something like terrestrial sand. It's sharp and incredibly abrasive as a result.

      @raifsevrence@raifsevrence8 ай бұрын
  • Real engineering and history of the universe uploading both about hydrogen, thats so neat!

    @ThijquintNL@ThijquintNL8 ай бұрын
  • Great video. Really exited for the future.

    @kylan6631@kylan66318 ай бұрын
  • Hear me out, if you make the radio telescope massively large, like 4000km wide, It'll look like the Death Star.

    @cr0ss0ut@cr0ss0ut8 ай бұрын
    • Now we only need to find a 4000km wide crater

      @linecraftman3907@linecraftman39078 ай бұрын
    • Moon's only about 2000 km diameter. Need to build it on Venus! There's a lot of sulfuric acid, so don't use any metal. (Surprising, but NASA has not yet put me in charge of any major science programs🤓.)

      @DrunkenUFOPilot@DrunkenUFOPilot8 ай бұрын
  • A challenge that you did not mention is how to place the telescope in the center of the moon crater. Landing on a pre-determined zone on the moon surface has never been done before. It's the whole point of Japan's recent Slim probe launch I believe.

    @karimohamed11@karimohamed118 ай бұрын
    • SpaceX seems to have gotten pretty good at not missing the LZ. Of course there's no Lunar Positioning System or beacon on the moon... today.

      @jimurrata6785@jimurrata67858 ай бұрын
    • Target sites, even extremely small ones, are a well understood problem, and many countries have had large arsenals of rockets ready to do it on earth for well over 50 years now. Doing it on the moon is entirely a question of practice.

      @dustinbrueggemann1875@dustinbrueggemann18758 ай бұрын
    • Apollo 12 performed a precision landing.

      @Suppise152@Suppise1528 ай бұрын
    • @@Suppise152 I thought they had to manually handle the last part of the landing because of unforeseen boulders ?

      @SerBallister@SerBallister8 ай бұрын
    • @@SerBallister That's Apollo 11. Also onboard computers usually have hazard avoidance built into their landing procedures.

      @captainyossarian388@captainyossarian3888 ай бұрын
  • I love onshape. No other free cad offers such high quality and freedom

    @GiulioVonKerman@GiulioVonKerman8 ай бұрын
  • Building this on Lagrangian poin just is a lot more sense: 1. Sending astronout is plausible 2. Waay less delta v (even less delta v than GEO ) 3. Far enough from earth interference 4. No temperature fluctuations 5. No weigh. You can use reaction wheel and lighter material. 6. Easier communication

    @ramabg2@ramabg28 ай бұрын
  • Besides, line of sight communication, maintenance, transportation, setup, and cost this should be a breeze.

    @kineticstar@kineticstar8 ай бұрын
    • Yeah yeah besides all the things that make it difficult, it should be extremely easy

      @crackedemerald4930@crackedemerald49308 ай бұрын
    • @@crackedemerald4930fr!

      @mr_pigman1013@mr_pigman10138 ай бұрын
    • ​@@crackedemerald4930 Naturally.

      @elliotgillum@elliotgillum8 ай бұрын
  • the best method would be to have a drone that can drive to each point, secure the wires, and send them into the center, to be collected and attached, then used to setup the rest with special cable climbing drones. as this would allow adjustments on the fly, if needed, or to lower them to reduce damage, incase of any weird situations that might need a new cable to be planted.

    @Golden_SnowFlake@Golden_SnowFlake8 ай бұрын
  • Wow, I actually thought about this idea a number of years ago, interesting to see it being explored..

    @mindwarp4818@mindwarp48188 ай бұрын
  • Hey , the notes about LCRT that you showed with alot of maths and physics involved...can you give the pdf of that ?? I am really interested in reading that...please.... (If you see this )

    @ankitnmnaik229@ankitnmnaik2298 ай бұрын
  • This is an amazing project, and the best part is that it’s actually feasable. Maybe the only problem is the possibility of an asteroid that could hit the wires or one of the anchors.. since it’s all connected it could make all the structure collapse

    @edoval1029@edoval10298 ай бұрын
  • The faster and more economical way to build a powerful Lunar telescope, would be with multiple telescopes launched in various missions, arranged in a pattern. Or even simpler and viable, assembly a giant telescope at orbit, and then deploy it to a Lagrange Point. No issues with dust, landing, or thermal amplitudes.

    @RogerM88@RogerM888 ай бұрын
    • Maintaining a formation of satellites at a Lagrange Point is increadibly complicated. Thermal oscillations would still be a problem, since every Lunar Lagrange point is eventually directly in front of the Sun (with the exception of L1 which can't be used anyway because of noise coming from the Earth). Orbiting satellites have a lifespan dictated (among other things) by their propellant availability for orbital maneuvers. Maintaining a formation severily affects the fuel budget of satellites, and, at the moment we have no idea how to refuel a spacecraft. An orbiting formation telescope is not faster nor less expensive to build

      @spacelapsus8835@spacelapsus88358 ай бұрын
  • This’s absolutely brilliant. Let’s get it done.

    @danielwhyatt3278@danielwhyatt32788 ай бұрын
  • Great project and presentation!👍

    @Muuip@Muuip8 ай бұрын
  • 0:36: 🔭 The James Webb Space Telescope has captured incredible and unprecedented images of the universe, but a massive space radio telescope could allow us to go even further back in time. 3:10: 🌑 The lunar orbiter has been collecting data since 2009 and needs to be on the far side of the Moon to avoid radio interference. A crater with specific dimensions and characteristics is required for the telescope's operation. 6:05: 🌙 To create a better focused beam, the shape of the wire needs to be closer to a half-circle, which can be achieved by strategically suspending weights along its length. 9:20: ! The use of origami in space missions allows for compact packaging of large structures. 12:08: 🌙 NASA and ESA are investing in lunar exploration, with the goal of sending humans to the Moon's south pole. Recap by Tammy AI

    @aanchaallllllll@aanchaallllllll8 ай бұрын
    • ok. why

      @dalton-at-work@dalton-at-work8 ай бұрын
  • It sucks being born at a time when humanity hasnt conquered the stars yet.

    @vivi_75@vivi_758 ай бұрын
    • Humanity never will conquer the stars, our civilization has reached its zenith already. Climate change is going to bring us back to the stone age.

      @1981menso@1981menso8 ай бұрын
    • Good luck waiting another 10000 years if not longer.

      @Alphoric@Alphoric8 ай бұрын
    • Sucks that we are much more likely to kill each other as we choke on the fumes of a dying economic system than conquer the stars.

      @BadOompaloompa79@BadOompaloompa798 ай бұрын
    • @@Alphoric then maybe we don't deserve to colonize other celestial bodies.

      @vivi_75@vivi_758 ай бұрын
    • @@vivi_75 we don’t, we also don’t need to. Why move to the Sahara desert when you live in a tropical paradise. I don’t know why you’d want to become alien invaders anyway

      @Alphoric@Alphoric8 ай бұрын
  • 11:18 This is the main telescope at Siding Springs observatory in australia. I’ve seen it move while on tour there it’s awesome

    @jayrog868@jayrog8688 ай бұрын
  • There is another sollution to getting the dish shape right in adition to weight distribution. Basically that sollution comes from electrified traintracks, or rather the wires that feed power to through the panthograph. You see with traintracks you want the wires as straight as possible, but naturally they sag, no matter what you do, hecen a second wire is strung above and conecting wires are applied. The connecting wires pull the lower wires up, making them straighter, the upper wires get pulled down a bit, but we pretty much don't care about that one, so long as it stays above the lower wire. now I don't think this sollution will be the "go to method" but it could help with the shape when weight distribution alone would be too tricky.

    @EnraEnerato@EnraEnerato8 ай бұрын
  • It would be easier to build it with Starship if it's successful, even without ever flying humans on the ship

    @xWood4000@xWood40008 ай бұрын
    • Guaranteed it will succeed.

      @LordFalconsword@LordFalconsword8 ай бұрын
  • Its nice of you to spread the word of unknown organizations like NASA

    @HeisenbergFam@HeisenbergFam8 ай бұрын
    • Strange comment

      @hayleyxyz@hayleyxyz8 ай бұрын
    • Unknown? Where are you from? North Korea?

      @heidirabenau511@heidirabenau5118 ай бұрын
    • we've got a spinlaunch fan here

      @salvatronprime9882@salvatronprime98828 ай бұрын
  • a truly beautiful structure. i love how 'space tech' tends to be way more aligned with synergetic principles to create 'sea-worthy' systems, meaning most obviously more focus on triangulation. now if only we applied the same principles and logic here on the ground... just a subtlety, you called those cables the skeleton of the telescope, but as it is a tensegrity system (as our bodies are) a better comparison might be the fascia. our bones don't give us shape, our fascia do. similarly, i would call the spine a chain rather than a column.

    @HaileISela@HaileISela8 ай бұрын
    • Get out of that basement! Quick!

      @derrickcox7761@derrickcox77618 ай бұрын
  • Setting cost aside for a just a second, would their be any benefit from having an array of telescopes on the far side of the moon? The Square Kilometer Array has assets in South Africa and Australia, and it pays dividends being set up that way.

    @firefox39693@firefox396938 ай бұрын
  • Building a telescope on the moon is cool. It would be cooler if we caught old alien radio broadcasts with it. Or maybe that's another part of the mission that's top secret 👀

    @MauricioBarragan@MauricioBarragan8 ай бұрын
  • if the CHOSEN ONE crater destroys the mesh someho or doesn't work as expected , i would want McGregor to go "you were the chosen one!"

    @edith.0301@edith.03018 ай бұрын
  • I recall reading years ago about a much more ambitious plan to build a radio telescope many kilometers across on the lunar far-side. This is less ambitious, but actual doable fairly soon. We live in a fantastic time for astronomy!

    @paulkinzer7661@paulkinzer76618 ай бұрын
  • People at ESA, even the general directior reads ESA the same way as you read NASA not as typical acronym fasion like JPL. Great video!

    @konstruktywnymechanik9925@konstruktywnymechanik99254 ай бұрын
  • Another great video! A very interesting project...

    @EuelBall@EuelBall8 ай бұрын
  • I love this idea because it’s a stretch but not too wild.

    @willum223@willum2238 ай бұрын
  • Credit to the BYU CMR for making those unfolding origami solar array animations!

    @daviswing@daviswing8 ай бұрын
  • For 2-3 billion dollars, we can build and use a large-enough mass-driver (aka. large-scale railgun, aka. glorified electric train with the rails doing the accelerating), to get the materials on the Moon, needing fuel only for minimal steering and for the landing.

    @SapioiT@SapioiT8 ай бұрын
  • If anyone is interested, there is a manga that covers this same topic, called "Uschuu Kyoudai" or Space Brothers, really interesting read.

    @stretchycheese8522@stretchycheese85227 ай бұрын
  • A great idea! But my fear is, that with more and more moon missions, there come more and more radio interferences to the moon. This applies to optical telescopes on the moon as well, with satellite flares through optical reflection of the sunlight. But I don't have a solution for that. As soon as something is being built, more traffic comes, manned or unmanned traffic. Maybe in 100 years, the best spot for such a telescope would be on Pluto, as our missions go further and further out into space... and then Pluto is accessible for such missions... for a while at least until it gets too crowded there too ;-) (It might be a different location, not Pluto, because Pluto is a well known object, it would be a desirable place to visit for wealthy space tourists. Some things might never change ;-) And I even don't know if that would be good or bad... Good that some day we might reach out routinely really far, but sad that telescopes must move out even further...

    @richard--s@richard--s8 ай бұрын
  • I had no idea the radio telescope was that one map in BF3… great gameplay and snipping lol

    @lowballa2861@lowballa28618 ай бұрын
  • Great video! Small edit, The best shape for a telescope is a parabola not a semi circle. Semi circles actually lead to something called spherical aberation

    @peterfranklin110@peterfranklin11029 күн бұрын
  • If cables are going to be used to support the dish, lacking a better word the cable might be able to be pulled in a way that changes the direction of the dish. While I don't see that idea will allow for the same degree of movement than a land base; however, a few degrees or fractions on a degree will be better than no movement.

    @pandajfry@pandajfry8 ай бұрын
  • can you share the reference to the paper you are showing in the video? Seems like a very interesting read. Thanks!

    @ashutoshsrivastava303@ashutoshsrivastava3038 ай бұрын
  • Please more of this kind of subjects (near future science and civil engineering)

    @ironman8257@ironman82578 ай бұрын
    • It's all nonsense fake bs

      @gulfy09@gulfy098 ай бұрын
  • A good start, but I'd like to see a huge array of thousands of dishes covering the entire Moon, millions of different baselines. Half the dishes on one hemisphere could observe one target while the other hemisphere observes something else. Receivers for all wavelengths we have technology for. A radio astronomer's dream come true!

    @DrunkenUFOPilot@DrunkenUFOPilot8 ай бұрын
  • Thx for the video!

    @Alexandragon1@Alexandragon18 ай бұрын
  • I think that in 8:31 the comparison should be between the estimated cost of JWST and not the actual one (the original estimation was 1 billion dollars if I recall correctly)

    @arielmannes2544@arielmannes25448 ай бұрын
  • Super interesting, thank you!

    @ancliuin2459@ancliuin24598 ай бұрын
  • Use of a truss structure folded out with supports coming at intervals or distances which to are folded out than shooting out anchors into the regolith and hope that it anchors into the soil would be a very big gamble.

    @ulrichraymond8372@ulrichraymond83728 ай бұрын
KZhead