Written by 5:44 pm World Secrets

NASA Liquid Lens Space Telescope Could be 100 Times the Size of Webb

NASA Liquid Lens Space Telescope Could be 100 Times the Size of Webb




NASA’s huge new James Webb Space Telescope is the most powerful telescope ever launched into space, but the agency is already looking toward the future. It is currently exploring the possibility of creating liquid lenses to make a gigantic telescope perhaps 100 times the size of the Webb.
In a new article on its website, NASA writes that it is exploring new ways and fluid materials to build giant telescopes.
“When it comes to telescopes, bigger is better,” the agency writes. “Larger telescopes collect more light and allow astronomers to peer farther into space and see distant objects in greater detail.

“What if there was a way to make a telescope 10 times – or even 100 times – bigger than before? What started as a theoretical question is now a series of experiments to see if fluids can be used to create lenses in microgravity.”




Experiments on Making Liquid Lenses in Space
The experiments are currently being stored on the ISS U.S. National Labin the United States Orbital Segment (USOS) of the International Space Station (ISS) as they await the arrival of the astronauts aboard Axiom Mission 1, a private crew mission that is scheduled to send four people to the ISS for an eight-day stay.

Private Israeli astronaut Eytan Stibbe, Mission Specialist 2 on the crew, will be carrying out the experiments as part of his research portfolio.

While liquids may be less useful as optical lenses in Earth’s gravity, they are great at focusing light in microgravity.




“All liquids have an elastic-like force that holds them together at their surface,” NASA says. “This force is called surface tension. It’s what allows some insects to glide across water without sinking and gives water droplets their shape. On Earth, when droplets of water are small enough (2 mm or smaller), surface tension overcomes gravity and they remain perfectly spherical. If a droplet grows much larger, it gets squished under its own weight.

“But in space, blobs of water and other liquids (after wobbling about) eventually assume a perfect spherical shape.”
After successful experiments on the ground, the researchers also tested their experiment in simulated microgravity on ZeroG parabolic airplane flights. They successfully but momentarily created liquid lenses of desired shapes before the airplane stopped diving and gravity ruined the lenses.

FLUTE researchers create a momentary liquid lens during a zero gravity airplane flight. Photo by Technion – Israel Institute of Technology.




Opening the Door to Giant Space Telescopes
When the experiment is done in permanent microgravity aboard the International Space Station, Stibbe will be adding an additional step to cure the fluid into a lens that holds its shape. Once the lenses are created with liquid polymers and hardened with either UV light or temperature, they will be sent back to Earth for analysis by NASA researchers at Ames.

“We expect this approach will create perfectly shaped and smooth surfaces: the best surfaces to turn into mirrors,” says FLUTE scientist Vivek Dwivedi at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center.
“If our station experiment is successful, it will be the first time an optical component is made in space,” says Balaban. “It feels a bit like making history.”

If all goes well, liquid transported on multiple missions to space could be combined to create colossal space telescopes that could otherwise be too large to launch from Earth.





The James Webb Space Telescope is set to capture the highest-quality images of space humans have ever seen, but it may one day be supplanted by “liquid lens” telescopes 100 times as large that capture space photos we can only dream of today.



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