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Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/01/2019 15:06:51How dark the moon can get, at least 50% of the time. Probably a good place for a very large chinese telescope.But the moon does rotate, albeit very slowly, stationary telescopes on the dark side would eventually turn towards the Earth. Telescopes in lagrange node maybe just as effective.
How dark the moon can get, at least 50% of the time. Probably a good place for a very large chinese telescope.
But the moon does rotate, albeit very slowly,
stationary telescopes on the dark side would eventually turn towards the Earth
Quote from: Pesq on 10/01/2019 15:26:55Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/01/2019 15:06:51How dark the moon can get, at least 50% of the time. Probably a good place for a very large chinese telescope.But the moon does rotate, albeit very slowly, stationary telescopes on the dark side would eventually turn towards the Earth. Telescopes in lagrange node maybe just as effective. To reiterate, The Moon does not have a "dark side". It does have a side that always faces away from the Earth. One advantage of putting a radio telescope there would be that it would be in a "radio shadow" as far as the Earth is concerned, being shielded from the electromagnetic noise of our planet. Whether that would be enough of an improvement to make such a venture worth it is another matter.
Quote from: Janus on 10/01/2019 16:20:04Quote from: Pesq on 10/01/2019 15:26:55Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/01/2019 15:06:51How dark the moon can get, at least 50% of the time. Probably a good place for a very large chinese telescope.But the moon does rotate, albeit very slowly, stationary telescopes on the dark side would eventually turn towards the Earth. Telescopes in lagrange node maybe just as effective. To reiterate, The Moon does not have a "dark side". It does have a side that always faces away from the Earth. One advantage of putting a radio telescope there would be that it would be in a "radio shadow" as far as the Earth is concerned, being shielded from the electromagnetic noise of our planet. Whether that would be enough of an improvement to make such a venture worth it is another matter.near absolute telescopes already reduce the interference you cite.
Quote from: Pesq on 10/01/2019 16:38:08Quote from: Janus on 10/01/2019 16:20:04Quote from: Pesq on 10/01/2019 15:26:55Quote from: Petrochemicals on 10/01/2019 15:06:51How dark the moon can get, at least 50% of the time. Probably a good place for a very large chinese telescope.But the moon does rotate, albeit very slowly, stationary telescopes on the dark side would eventually turn towards the Earth. Telescopes in lagrange node maybe just as effective. To reiterate, The Moon does not have a "dark side". It does have a side that always faces away from the Earth. One advantage of putting a radio telescope there would be that it would be in a "radio shadow" as far as the Earth is concerned, being shielded from the electromagnetic noise of our planet. Whether that would be enough of an improvement to make such a venture worth it is another matter.near absolute telescopes already reduce the interference you cite. They cannot really,There is alot of scattering absorbtion reflection that you would not get in space, plus why not have a base where you can repair the telescope easily, have other types of telescope as outlined in earlier posts, search for the 'fusin 'wata, mine asteroids and the moon, cary out Space Force missions, man this would make Donald look good. If they had done this in the 60s rather than parties of astronauts going forward and back, we would still be there now. Hubble would not have been the problem it was and said telescope could have been upgraded. Why would we need the ISS ? Cheaper all round !
I was referring to absolute zero infrared telescopes
"near absolute" telescopes already reduce the interference you cite.
from now on I will call you. "doesn't know the moon rotates" ! lol
Yes it does, at exactly the same rate that it orbits the Earth.
The above statement implies otherwise, krypkid.
Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/01/2019 22:16:49So, it would be a bit silly to choose that nickname.Incidentally, the phrase is "nit pick".in your honor, we should change nit pick to something you do well, how about nose pick!
So, it would be a bit silly to choose that nickname.Incidentally, the phrase is "nit pick".
Quote from: Pesq on 10/01/2019 22:50:32Quote from: Bored chemist on 10/01/2019 22:16:49So, it would be a bit silly to choose that nickname.Incidentally, the phrase is "nit pick".in your honor, we should change nit pick to something you do well, how about nose pick! So, you accept you were talking nonsense about the Moon's rotation.I guess that's a start.
my mistake, I have withdrawn most of my posts to this thread. my apology to you and kyptid and to the community on a whole