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themafia 5 hours ago

Wouldn't the angle of the offset matter? It seems like it would make scattering worse to be off-axis by too far.

Which then also means you have to build ground stations in this range yet far enough apart that they experience different weather yet close enough that you can redundantly link all the sites.

Aside from government and massive telecommunications companies who would this serve?

dylan604 4 hours ago | parent [-]

???

It's just really cool sci-fi tech that I want to see used in something other than DLP chips!

JWST and other observatories with segmented primary mirrors kind of use the segment alignment one time to get the correct alignment once. Then there is Adaptive Optics. It's kind of the opposite direction though as they are using a laser to detect the distortion so it can be compensated in the image. From learning about SDI when I was a kid/teen, it's just always been about controlling the laser itself in my mind.

themafia 4 hours ago | parent [-]

The JWST does not have to deal with atmosphere or weather and uses a giant sun shield to keep the internal temperature stable so these alignments have the longevity you need to make the platform work.

dylan604 4 hours ago | parent [-]

Yes, maybe my comment wasn't clear if you're thinking I thought JWST was using AO. It used segment control for alignment once.