NGST History: 1995-1996
Going for 8 Meters
1995
Dan Goldin, the NASA director at that time, gave a presentation
pushing his "Faster, better, cheaper" motto at the AAS meeting.
He was disappointed by the lack of development in space
telescope technology, both for astronomy as well as for the
military. He urged the astronomical community to think big,
challenging them to come up with an 8m
telescope design at a lower cost than previous telescopes.
1996
Combining Goldin's challenge with the realization that a
lot of science needed to be and could be done at high redshifts
(z=1-5 and higher), more radical telescope designs were
studied. The higher redshifts goal pushed explorations of very low
infrared backgrounds, meaning observatory orbits much further
away from earth.
We have some very early designs from
Pierre Bely and Peter Stockman implementing new concepts
for NGST that are now still recognizable, like a large
deployable mirror (then still at 8m), L2 point orbit, and an
"open telescope design" (no external baffle) with passive
cooling behind a large multi-layer sunshield. This concept was
still envisioned with one large near-IR camera in the focal plain.
Four corporations joined the feasibility study, and came up with
designs that were generally very similar:
- NASA/Goddard with a telescope at L2, with a large sunshield and
a deployable 8m mirror,
- TRW with a telescope at L2, with a large sunshield and
an articulated 8m mirror,
- BALL Aerospace with a telescope at L2, with a large sunshield and
a deployable 8m mirror, and
- Lockheed with a monolithic 4m mirror at 3AU (which provides
low background, but also low solar power and more data
transmission problems).
The trade studies suggested that these designs could be
developed for about $500 million, under the assumption that
the whole telescope would be built by one contractor, as would
the science instruments. The idea of one contractor, like
many other assumptions going into the studies, turned
out not to be feasible, especially for the instruments.
Based on these studies, a comprehensive report was written,
titled
Next Generation Space Telescope, Visiting a Time When Galaxies
Were Young. This report also presented a technological
roadmap for the succesful development of NGST in the next decade.
In the meantime, more detailed simulations were conducted to
provide a better scientific basis for NGST and to drive its
instrument capabilities. For example, Myungshim Im
simulated deep images
for an 8m NGST, suggesting feasibility to detect galaxies out
to redshifts of 15, if they exist. These simulations
highlighted the need for diffraction limited operation to a
high wavelength in order to be feasible, and a strong push for mid-IR
capabilities. The simulations from, for instance Massimo
Stiavelli, indicated the need for Multi-Object Spectroscopic
capability for NGST. Where the followup of deep HST imaging
like the Hubble Deep Fields
was possible from the ground with 8m class ground-based telescopes,
this will no longer be true for the very high redshift galaxies
that will be discovered by NGST. If any science has to be done
on very high redshift galaxies beyond morphology and position on the
sky, NGST will have to do the spectroscopy itself, because most of
the flux will be redshifted to wavelengths out of reach of
ground-based telescopes.
Buoyed by all these studies, NASA agreed to fund additional
studies that further refined the technical and financial
requirements for building the telescope.
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