| ▲ | amluto 8 hours ago | |
Radio telescope dishes are huge so that they can receive (or even transmit in the case of Arecibo, which is gone now) a narrow beam. At long wavelengths you need something huge to get a narrow beam. But you can also use multiple, much smaller antennas to synthesize a narrow beam, and those little antennas are often dishes but can also be very simple and rather small antennas. | ||
| ▲ | adgjlsfhk1 3 hours ago | parent [-] | |
interferometry is good for seeing small objects, but not faint objects. for faint objects there's nothing that works better than a giant dish | ||