Maunakea TMT Protests (Read 266852 times)

groveler

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #100 on: July 21, 2019, 02:56:16 PM »
We used to get around pretty good on railroads, too.

There are numerous discoveries that were made using math and limited observation techniques.  That doesn't mean we should limit ourselves to what was used decades or centuries ago.

We won't know what we will find until we find it, and technology that didn't exist 10 or 20 years ago might be the thing that makes those discoveries possible.

Old observatories are hindered by the limits of their generation.

New technologies in computers, software, electronics, and manufacturing can let us make mirrors better, lighter and more powerful than we could before.  The TMT is also a multinational venture, sharing the cost and the scientific brainpower of several nations to better enable the TMT's construction and use.

And old observatories might be able to "do that now", but the TMT will be able to do it at twelve times the resolution.  That's significant when tracking objects or monitoring the surface of Mars.
I know I upset you sometimes.
Perhaps you did not read all my comments closely.
TMT is not going to be used for Mars studies.
I was privy to the TMT Critical Design Review.
I know TMT engineering and science staff.
I know Keck staff.
I know Gemini staff.
I know CFHT staff.
I've worked with them.
I'll stop there as you may be able to figure out my real
name if I say more.

ren

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #101 on: July 21, 2019, 03:33:35 PM »
I'll try to answer your questions, I've been out of the loop for a few years but all the rationals still exist.
" Do we need TMT with Hubble and Keck at our disposal"
Hubble is nearly dead and is barely working, I think if one more Gyro fails it will be useless.
The replacement, The James Web space telescope is way over cost and they are having some
very real technical problems, I'm not sure they will every get over them.
Keck I and II are awesome facilities. Fairly up to date.
They had a mirror cracking problem I'm not sure they have fixed yet.
There are also limits as to what they can do to update the telescope itself
to deal with Keck's physical limitations eg wind shake. The summit gets very windy.

In Astronomy the more Photons you can gather
repeatedly on the same detector Pixel 13 micrometers( or less) across the better.
Keck is ten meters across. TMT is thirty meters across.  that is a significant increase in
area to gather photons.  TMT is also designed to compensate for problems large
telescopes like Keck, et al have.
The Astronomical community figured the billion dollar Plus cost of the TMT is  worth the effort.
India, China, Japan, Canada, et al seem to agree as they are heavily invested in the TMT.

Do we need the TMT?  In astronomy all you are doing is studying history.
Studying galaxies that may not exist anymore as their light took 13 billion years to get here.
What good does that do?
Why go to the moon?  Why go to Mars?

The answer is because somebody is willing to pay for it,
because they want it, not because they need it.
Personally I thought the TMT money would be better spent
eradicating cancer, but that isn't as sexy as finding binary
Black holes in a far off Galaxy.

Hope that helps some.

that's a lot of good info about the TMT and telescopes in general. More than what the news is covering. This is where the project failed - the media campaign. All the TMT represents now is repression.
BTW, lots of trucks with the distressed flags. More of an excuse to organize a cruise than anything. Where were all these truck drivers were during the process to decide on the TMT ?
Deeds Not Words

Flapp_Jackson

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #102 on: July 21, 2019, 03:50:23 PM »
I know I upset you sometimes.
Perhaps you did not read all my comments closely.
TMT is not going to be used for Mars studies.
I was privy to the TMT Critical Design Review.
I know TMT engineering and science staff.
I know Keck staff.
I know Gemini staff.
I know CFHT staff.
I've worked with them.
I'll stop there as you may be able to figure out my real
name if I say more.

You don't upset me.  It's takes far more than what you've got to get under my skin.  I just enjoy pointing out how often you try to make crazy analogies that fall flat on their faces.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world;
the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

mrgaf

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #103 on: July 21, 2019, 06:50:33 PM »
There are many space borne telescopes, like Hubble, that will out perform earth bound telescopes by a long shot. Sorry, I thought Keck was space based. My bad.....
To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead.  Thomas Paine.

No man can get rich in politics unless he is a crook.  It cannot be done. Harry Truman

Only good liberal is one taking a dirt nap.

Flapp_Jackson

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #104 on: July 21, 2019, 07:41:51 PM »
There are many space borne telescopes, like Hubble, that will out perform earth bound telescopes by a long shot. Sorry, I thought Keck was space based. My bad.....

The problem with space-based is the cost of maintenance, repairs and upgrades.  We stopped launching space shuttles in 2011.  We'd have to out-source the missions to other countries or private space companies.

Hubble is expected to be functional through the mid-2020's.

https://www.space.com/42983-hubble-space-telescope-five-more-years.html
« Last Edit: July 21, 2019, 07:51:38 PM by Flapp_Jackson »
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world;
the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

Flapp_Jackson

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #105 on: July 21, 2019, 08:01:18 PM »
OHA has no position on the siting of the TMT on Maunakea

Quote
Telescope?  What telescope?

As protesters pour into the cameras view atop the Saddle Road, Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA) Trustees
are reminding Governor Ige of OHA’s real goal—not stopping the proposed Thirty Meter Telescope (TMT)
but gaining control of thousands of acres atop Mauna Kea.

A July 12, 2019 letter to Ige signed by OHA Trustees Chair Colette Machado and Trustee Dan Ahuna yields
this nugget:

   As you know, OHA has no position on the siting of the TMT on Maunakea….

In a July 14, 2019 news release, Machado and Ahuna urge:

   We as a society must set aside our differences on TMT….

Machado and Ahuna attempt to co-opt the protesters--not as anti-Telescope ‘protectors’ but:

   “OHA beneficiaries and others who have long voiced concerns about the state’s decades-long mismanagement of
   Maunakea.”


And beneficiaries they are.  Many of the protesters are affiliated with ‘immersion schools’ and non-profits funded by OHA.

In a July 17 statement issued just as police began making the first arrests, OHA again attempts to co-opt the Mauna Kea
protesters:

   ...Regardless of your position on TMT, we must all agree with Gov. Ige’s 2015 statement that the state has “failed” Maunakea.

   OHA will continue to proceed with our lawsuit against the state and UH for their mismanagement of Maunakea. We
   continue to call for the state and UH to be held accountable as fiduciaries for our trust resources, and we demand that
   a new management structure is immediately installed for Maunakea.


Media consumers will be “pana po’o” over those statements.  After years of media-borne agit-prop, a Google search for “sacred
Mauna Kea” pulls up 7,460 results.  Reacting to the protests, a UH Manoa grad student “studying indigenous history and settler
colonialism” tells West Hawaii Today, “Money will never justify the desecration of sacred places.”

Wrong.

$50M should just about cover it.

OHA’s point person on Mauna Kea issues, Kealoha Pisciotta, in 2008, demanded $50M a year, saying “the rent is past due.”  In
2002, former OHA Trustees Chair Clayton Hee, demanded astronomers give OHA “$20 million in endowments.”

Governor Ige’s 2015 10-Point Plan for Mauna Kea included transfer to DLNR—not OHA-- jurisdiction of “all lands (over 10,000 acres)
not specifically needed for astronomy.”  The acreage is part of the ‘Ceded Land’ trust held by the State for five purposes delineated in
the Admission Act including, “support of the public schools and other public educational institutions.”

At the center of its current strategy, a 2017 lawsuit filed by OHA “requests the court to order the state to fulfill its trust obligations
relating to Mauna Kea and to terminate UH’s general lease for the mountain for breach of the lease’s terms.”

In the news release announcing the lawsuit, OHA also de-emphasized the telescope.  OHA Trustee Dan Ahuna is quoted:

   “This is not about any one telescope. This lawsuit is about addressing the state’s failure to manage the entire mountain for nearly
   half a century.”

   “It’s time to abandon any hope that UH is capable or even willing to provide the level of aloha and attention to Mauna Kea that it deserves. 
   We need to come together as a community to completely re-think how we care for the mauna, and that starts with cancelling the university’s
   master lease.”

With the current master lease set to expire in 2033, UH lease renewal efforts are again underway after stops and starts going beck to 2013. 
The UH Regents will be considering new administrative rules for Mauna Kea at their August 22, 2019 meeting.

How can OHA be trusted as a land manager given its mis-management of Waimea Valley and other assets?

In January, 2017 lawyers for OHA’s limited liability corporations argued that “Sole title to the land comprising Waimea Valley was transferred
to Hi’ipaka LLC (by OHA) in 2007.  The State does not own the valley nor any of Hi’ipaka’s other assets….”   Rejecting a UIPA open records
request from Hawai’i Free Press, OHA’s LLCs pursued that line of reasoning, claiming they were not state assets--and therefore immune to
UIPA--until Honolulu First Circuit Court Judge Jeffrey Crabtree rejected their claims in his June 25, 2019, “Finding of Fact and Conclusions of
Law.”

For nearly a year, OHA insiders have lied to the legislature and stonewalled an audit of their secretive LLCs—thus placing OHA’s legislative
funding at risk.  When Trustee Keli’i Akina challenged this, the other trustees voted to “investigate’ him for ‘disloyalty’. 

OHA once had a deal to support TMT in exchange for money—they welched on it when the 2015 protests began.

http://www.hawaiifreepress.com/ArticlesMain/tabid/56/ID/23903/Machado-OHA-has-no-position-on-the-siting-of-the-TMT-on-Maunakea.aspx?utm_source=July+21%2C+2019+News+from+HawaiiFreePress++&utm_campaign=July+21%2C+2019+Email+&utm_medium=email
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world;
the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

RSN172

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #106 on: July 21, 2019, 08:19:09 PM »
TMT should sue the state for all the expenses and time wasted and go build the TMT in the Canary Islands, which was their 2nd choice. 
Happily living in Puna

ren

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #107 on: July 21, 2019, 08:24:54 PM »
OHA has no position on the siting of the TMT on Maunakea

http://www.hawaiifreepress.com/ArticlesMain/tabid/56/ID/23903/Machado-OHA-has-no-position-on-the-siting-of-the-TMT-on-Maunakea.aspx?utm_source=July+21%2C+2019+News+from+HawaiiFreePress++&utm_campaign=July+21%2C+2019+Email+&utm_medium=email

And there is the puppet master and the one with hands open for a payment.
We could be the land where new discoveries are being made.
But I give credit to the "movement". They are easily riled up. Their efforts will be rewarded but OHA will reap it.
Deeds Not Words

changemyoil66

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #108 on: July 21, 2019, 10:56:51 PM »
TMT should sue the state for all the expenses and time wasted and go build the TMT in the Canary Islands, which was their 2nd choice.
2nd draft choice, but was it as good or not even close to mauna kea?

Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk

RSN172

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #109 on: July 22, 2019, 06:55:11 AM »
2nd draft choice, but was it as good or not even close to mauna kea?

Sent from my SM-G950U using Tapatalk
Not as good.  Mauna Kea is about  the best place in the world to build a telescope.  Meanwhile, HNN says 2000 people were up there this weekend.  Large protests taking place in various cities in the US.  A large one in Waikiki this past weekend.  Like I said in the beginning, this should have been nipped in the bud.  LEO should have been in place the Saturday before and not allowed anyone one to walk or drive on the Access Rd and certainly not allow those tents to be erected.
Happily living in Puna

Heavies

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #110 on: July 22, 2019, 07:11:13 AM »
Trump should come out in support of the protesters.  That would throw Democrats into full insane meltdown mode.  It would be hilarious.

punaperson

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #111 on: July 22, 2019, 07:38:53 AM »
Not as good.  Mauna Kea is about  the best place in the world to build a telescope.  Meanwhile, HNN says 2000 people were up there this weekend.  Large protests taking place in various cities in the US.  A large one in Waikiki this past weekend.  Like I said in the beginning, this should have been nipped in the bud.  LEO should have been in place the Saturday before and not allowed anyone one to walk or drive on the Access Rd and certainly not allow those tents to be erected.
The only question all along has been: Has this "strategy" by the government been due to incompetence and malfeasance, or due to the intent to aid and abet the racist criminals?

changemyoil66

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #112 on: July 22, 2019, 08:50:19 AM »
The only question all along has been: Has this "strategy" by the government been due to incompetence and malfeasance, or due to the intent to aid and abet the racist criminals?

Wasn't Kealoha on one of the impact study boards?

I think this is Hawaii incompetence for all those invovled.   But the tinfoil hat on me wants to think that since day 1 of the planning, the project was hush hush by everyone.  Media, reps, boards, etc...This way once it's approved and contracts are signed, cannot stop it.  I say hush hush as in maybe one 20 second story on the news about it years ago.  Why doesn't the media release who were on all these boards and everyone involved at the first bidding stages?  Because they want to get reelected.

See Green on the mountain this morning.  I do give him some leeway because he was not in politics when this began, so he could do nothing.  But for him to show up in his scrubs,to me is a photo op for election of gov.  Wait and see and he will use "I was at Mauna Kea with the people".  He doesn't want to make a statement against Ige yet, because Ige might replace him or do things to make him look bad for gov election.  Cause Ige is done after this, his final term ,so he no care.

ren

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #113 on: July 22, 2019, 09:19:33 AM »
Trump should come out in support of the protesters.  That would throw Democrats into full insane meltdown mode.  It would be hilarious.

that would be hilarious. The protestors wuould probably flip and say F&CK TRUMP. He is against science. He will get blamed for not getting the telescope built
Deeds Not Words

changemyoil66

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #114 on: July 22, 2019, 09:26:28 AM »
that would be hilarious. The protestors wuould probably flip and say F&CK TRUMP. He is against science. He will get blamed for not getting the telescope built

Or sign a XO like how he did for Dakota pipeline.  They say fuck him anyways, so might as well do a XO.

zippz

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #115 on: July 22, 2019, 09:32:05 AM »
The problem with space-based is the cost of maintenance, repairs and upgrades.  We stopped launching space shuttles in 2011.  We'd have to out-source the missions to other countries or private space companies.

Cost to build it is another problem.  Ten billion for the James Webb telescope vs one billion for TMT

Flapp_Jackson

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #116 on: July 22, 2019, 09:50:18 AM »
Cost to build it is another problem.  Ten billion for the James Webb telescope vs one billion for TMT

A lot of that is probably communications and guidance systems unnecessary for a ground-based observatory.  The orbiting observatories also require redundancy of almost every system and part to avoid having to fly up every year to do repairs.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world;
the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

jerry_03

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #117 on: July 22, 2019, 10:39:36 AM »
According to the specs, the TMT will offer TWLEVE TIMES the resolution of the best telescope in the world today. 

nitpicking here, but the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) currently being built in Chile by the European Southern Observatory is 39 meters, which is obviously bigger than TMT, so TMT would already be smaller if it were to be built

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_Large_Telescope

Though I realize that TMT would supplement the ELT because ELT is in the Southern hemisphere and TMT would be in the Northern Hemisphere.
« Last Edit: July 22, 2019, 10:45:17 AM by jerry_03 »

Flapp_Jackson

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #118 on: July 22, 2019, 11:04:38 AM »
nitpicking here, but the Extremely Large Telescope (ELT) currently being built in Chile by the European Southern Observatory is 39 meters, which is obviously bigger than TMT, so TMT would already be smaller if it were to be built

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Extremely_Large_Telescope

Though I realize that TMT would supplement the ELT because ELT is in the Southern hemisphere and TMT would be in the Northern Hemisphere.

Lots of technical and mechanical issues to solve the larger the mirror gets.  ELT original plan was for 100m primary mirror, but the segments were too large to transport over Chile's roads to the construction site. 

Two mirror panels are removed and cleaned on a daily rotating basis. Monitoring systems look for variations of curvature due to wind and weight distribution when the mirror moves.  They have to be adjusted automatically to maintain a perfect shape.  The larger the mirror, the more difficult that job becomes.

Increasing the size brings new problems and challenges to solve or mitigate.  Until they are built and working, all we can do is trust the designers and testers didn't overlook something significant, like they did on the Hubble mirror.
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world;
the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself.
Therefore, all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

groveler

Re: Maunakea TMT Protests
« Reply #119 on: July 22, 2019, 02:27:57 PM »
Lots of technical and mechanical issues to solve the larger the mirror gets.  ELT original plan was for 100m primary mirror, but the segments were too large to transport over Chile's roads to the construction site. 

Two mirror panels are removed and cleaned on a daily rotating basis. Monitoring systems look for variations of curvature due to wind and weight distribution when the mirror moves.  They have to be adjusted automatically to maintain a perfect shape.  The larger the mirror, the more difficult that job becomes.

Increasing the size brings new problems and challenges to solve or mitigate.  Until they are built and working, all we can do is trust the designers and testers didn't overlook something significant, like they did on the Hubble mirror.
You are correct.  But you really have no idea how difficult mirror segment exchange really is.
also mirrors are "cleaned" with a CO2 snow not removed.  The summit is very dirty.
When removed segments are stripped and re-coated.
You can't just use Windex.
ELT and the proposed JELT ( bet you didn't know about that one!) use the same technologies as
TMT and the Kecks.
Coatings are selected on Reflectivity and Emissivity.
You want to reflect as many photons as possible, but at the same time add as little heat
Photons as possible.  Most astronomy is done in the Infra red( heat).
Aluminum  is the metal of choice, or really is the one they are stuck with.

I think if they can solve the problems, James Web will be the best
telescope we can ever have.  Perhaps put up two or three.