Philip P. Ide

Author, programmer, science enthusiast, half-wit.
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blog:articles:science:nasa_technologies:most_space_telescope

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blog:articles:science:nasa_technologies:most_space_telescope [2020/11/01 11:36] Phil Ideblog:articles:science:nasa_technologies:most_space_telescope [2020/11/01 11:39] (current) Phil Ide
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 ====== THE MOST Space Telescope ====== ====== THE MOST Space Telescope ======
 {{ :blog:articles:the_most_telescope.png?300|}} {{ :blog:articles:the_most_telescope.png?300|}}
-//[Disambiguation: this is not [[https://astro-canada.ca/le_telescope_spatial_most-the_most_space_telescope-eng|Canada's MOST space telescope]]]//+//[Disambiguation: this page is about The High Étendue Multiple Object Spectrographic Telescope, not [[https://astro-canada.ca/le_telescope_spatial_most-the_most_space_telescope-eng|Canada's MOST space telescope]]]//
  
 Few telescopes can honestly say they've reinvented the concept, yet THE MOST certainly has. It works on a surprisingly old principle, by passing light through two prisms. As Isaac Newton demonstrated, this first splits light into its constituent components, then recombines it back again. Few telescopes can honestly say they've reinvented the concept, yet THE MOST certainly has. It works on a surprisingly old principle, by passing light through two prisms. As Isaac Newton demonstrated, this first splits light into its constituent components, then recombines it back again.
blog/articles/science/nasa_technologies/most_space_telescope.1604230615.txt.gz · Last modified: 2020/11/01 11:36 by Phil Ide

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