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RadioAstron: How a state-of-the-art space telescope works
RadioAstron: How a state-of-the-art space telescope works
Sputnik International
The state-of-the-art Russian orbital radio telescope RadioAstron (Spektr R) is a thousand times more powerful than its foreign counterpart, the Hubble. The... 28.07.2011, Sputnik International
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RadioAstron: How a state-of-the-art space telescope works
Sputnik International
The state-of-the-art Russian orbital radio telescope RadioAstron (Spektr R) is a thousand times more powerful than its foreign counterpart, the Hubble. The unit has high-power solar panels and the world's largest solid-state radar antenna, with a diameter of ten meters. Experts believe that using RadioAstron in conjunction with its land-based counterparts will enable astronomers to see extraterrestrial objects with a resolution of up to seven microseconds.
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RadioAstron: How a state-of-the-art space telescope works
14:26 GMT 28.07.2011 (Updated: 19:54 GMT 19.10.2022) The state-of-the-art Russian orbital radio telescope RadioAstron (Spektr R) is a thousand times more powerful than its foreign counterpart, the Hubble. The unit has high-power solar panels and the world's largest solid-state radar antenna, with a diameter of ten meters. Experts believe that using RadioAstron in conjunction with its land-based counterparts will enable astronomers to see extraterrestrial objects with a resolution of up to seven microseconds.
The state-of-the-art Russian orbital radio telescope RadioAstron (Spektr R) is a thousand times more powerful than its foreign counterpart, the Hubble. The unit has high-power solar panels and the world's largest solid-state radar antenna, with a diameter of ten meters. Experts believe that using RadioAstron in conjunction with its land-based counterparts will enable astronomers to see extraterrestrial objects with a resolution of up to seven microseconds.