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2 votes
2 answers
103 views

Could we hear alien radio transmissions using radio interferometry?

Suppose money and engineering wasn't a concern. Could we actually build a bunch of radio telescopes in space, and use radio interferometry, so that we could actually hear the sort of radio ...
Adrian's user avatar
  • 51
2 votes
2 answers
186 views

What is stopping Event Horizon Telescope the size of the Earth’s orbit?

There is a proposal to include a radio sensor in a telescope going to the Sun-Earth L2, getting 120x improvement in angular resolution to EHT. Knowing nothing about interferometry, it seems pretty ...
Ahmbak's user avatar
  • 123
1 vote
0 answers
99 views

Maximum number of pixels across a synthesized beam in an ALMA image?

I have some ALMA data, from which I have created images using the TCLEAN task in CASA. I understand that with this type of data, it is necessary to have at least 2 pixels across the FWHM of the ...
lucas's user avatar
  • 1,386
4 votes
0 answers
136 views

How did Michelson measure the diameters of jupiter's moons using optical interferometry?

In Betelgeuse: How its Diameter was measured (Chant, C. A., Journal of the Royal Astronomical Society of Canada, Vol. 15, p.133, Bibliographic Code: 1921JRASC..15..133C) the author says: The paper in ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
1 vote
1 answer
302 views

Can the interferometer called "Gravity" measure "a few centimeters on the Moon"?

Phys.org's Very Large Telescope sees star dance around supermassive black hole, proves Einstein right links to several ESO videos, including Interview with Reinhard Genzel (in English). After ...
uhoh's user avatar
  • 30.7k
7 votes
2 answers
369 views

Why not us interferometry to take a picture of Pluto?

Interferometry is among the best ways (if not, the best way!) to have an image of a very distant object. Recently a picture of the black hole at the center of M87 was released. It is the result of ...
Victorbrine Cassini's user avatar
8 votes
2 answers
374 views

What makes small interferometers useful? Like NIRISS on JWST

NIRISS is an instrument on the James Webb Space Telescope. It has a "non-redundant aperture mask" which obviously covers most of the area of the sensor. It seems to be advantageous for high contrast ...
LocalFluff's user avatar
  • 11.4k