4 Future Space Telescopes NASA wants to build

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Published 2020-06-13
4 future space telescopes NASA wants to build are the Habitable Exoplanet Explorer (HabEx), the Lynx X-Ray telescope, Origins Space Telescope, and the Large Ultraviolet Optical Infrared Explorer (LUVOIR) . If approved, these 4 future space telescopes will succeed the James Webb Space Telescope and the Nancy Grace Roman space telescopes. To that end, NASA and astronomers now have four final reports for these space telescopes that if selected, will find habitable Earth-like worlds:

0:00 Start
2:54 Habitable Exoplanet observatory (HabEx)
8:53 Lynx X-Ray observatory
12:00 Origins Space Telescope (OST)
17:17 Large Ultraviolet, Optical, Infrared Surveyor (LUVOIR)

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All Comments (21)
  • @michal_king478
    Hope we get to see LUVOIR A. Just imagine what it will capture compared to hubble. 30 or 40 years newer sensor technology, 33x the light gathering capacity, 6x higher angular resolution
  • @tma2001
    NASA: Which ones should we build?
    Astronomers: yes!
  • @frasercain
    Awesome work. I was able to interview all the science leads for each of these missions at the AAS, and we're working on our videos for the next telescopes.
  • @joedasilva134
    How I wish all of them were built . There is much to see n so much to discover .
    Thanks Christian for sharing this exciting video. We r together in this journey
  • @MrKKUT1984
    LUVOIR A for me personally, I wouldn't be upset if they decided to make it even bigger:)
  • I hope we don't get a video in 2030 saying "Why these 4 new space telescopes haven't launched yet"
  • @aaronjacobs3980
    I can't wait to see what we learn from these telescopes, this will be a good decade for astronomy
  • @thenasadude6878
    There's no lack of ideas about new telescopes it seems...
    Good!
  • @Dan5482
    This is one of the best astronomy channels on YT. Thanks!
  • @TerjeNesthus
    Excellent video. Been looking forward to Webb for years, but these other telescopes looks amazing too. This is just the channel I've been missing on youtube, thanks!
  • Always strange and fun to see projects I've helped design getting this kind of attention. Thanks for the great content!
  • Thank you for taking the time to produce such a valuable and timely update and kudos to the brilliant engineers and scientists who work hard these long range projects!
  • @LYAM_GRACE
    Your words while teaching through each video connected my emotions from when I was a 5YO Kid. Always passionate about the space things. all the best for you. Greetings from Colombia 🇨🇴
  • @mbrsart
    I can't wait to see what glorious things Lynx finds. I'm also eager for more exoplanet resesearch, so HabEx is super exciting.
  • First time seeing any of your videos. This was fabulous and really stretched my brain with all your detailed information. Thank you.
  • @danimal_1814
    Great Video - thank you for this!! I like to believe we should see an increase in the speed and ease of getting more projects like this underway with the advent of commercial entities such as SpaceX and Blue Origin ... I hope these are not the only ones to succeed in making space exploration faster/cheaper/safer.
  • @WayneTheSeine
    Can't wait to see the first images of the James Webb. I suspect they will shake the earth.
  • @musicdev
    I still can’t believe I’m fascinated by telescopes. Glad I have channels like these to remind me that liking telescopes is totally cool
  • @philflip1963
    Excellent, thorough and technically detailed coverage of a great many of the issues. Well done!