The Hubble Telescope is probably as good as you will get. That cost mucho dinero and trying to convince people to spend more for a bigger and better model will be a hard sell.
2007-06-05 07:40:06
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answer #1
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answered by cattbarf 7
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The James Webb Space Telescope is moving into it's detailed design phase soon and is slated to launch in 6 or 7 years. It has a mirror with a diamter more than twice that of the Hubble. However it won't be used for looking at distant stars the way you describe.
To do that, it would require a telescope many times larger than what we have on Earth to resolve that kind of detail, and it would probably have to be in space. It would be extremely difficult to create such a scope with today's technology.
2007-06-05 08:51:21
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answer #2
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answered by Arkalius 5
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I think it will be a looong time. There is always talk of the bext big thing. But nothing in the works will give us a surface shot of anything extrasolar.
You are right though about the interferometer. I'd like to see us place telescopes scattered in orbit around the sun. Talk about light gathering then!!! Even 10 or so cheaper ones in the same orbit as earth should be able to do something. Maybe with one in close like Mercury's orbit.
2007-06-05 08:00:17
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Some detail was already obtained on the surface of Betelgeuse (a red giant star), with existing telescopes (Hubble in 1995, with large arrays of radiotelescopes, and I think even with arrays of large telescopes with adaptive optics in interferometric setup)
2007-06-05 08:05:02
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answer #4
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answered by Daniel B 3
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as nicely to the reality that it may could be incredibly super to hold mutually the mandatory gentle, you could could take care of the reality that stars are far brighter than their planets via the form of huge volume that it may could be set up in a particular thank you to dodge the sunshine from the celeb and nonetheless be waiting to work out the sunshine from the planet. this could take some very particular technologies certainly.
2016-12-18 14:45:55
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answer #5
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answered by ricaurte 4
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Hubble!
Right now!
You could look up the website and find out for yourself, but, boy, that would be too easy.
2007-06-05 07:44:12
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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