AMMB STIG Seminar Recording Posted

by | Jul 16, 2026 | Climate Change

Cosmic Origins

16 July 2026

Please follow the link to the previous Astrophysics from the Moon, Mars, and Beyond STIG seminar that happened on July 1st. 

Why and Where Do We Want to Put Telescopes on the Moon?

https://science.nasa.gov/astrophysics/programs/physics-of-the-cosmos/community/ammb-stig-seminar-1-july-2026

Speaker: Nivedita Mahesh | CU Boulder

Abstract:

The Moon is emerging as a uniquely valuable platform for astrophysics, enabling observations that neither Earth nor free-flying spacecraft can support. This talk surveys the scientific motivation across four complementary regimes. At low radio frequencies, the radio-quiet lunar farside opens a window onto the cosmological Dark Ages and the magnetospheres of exoplanets. In the mid-band gravitational-wave regime, the Moon’s low seismic activity bridges the sensitivity gap between terrestrial and space-based detectors. At ultraviolet wavelengths, its natural vacuum and long coherence times allow high-resolution stellar imaging beyond what is possible on Earth. And in the far-infrared, the cold, stable conditions of permanently shadowed regions offer a naturally cryogenic, absorption-free site for probing star and planet formation and the obscured Universe. For each regime, I will share updates from the mission concept leads on the efforts now developing within the Astrophysics from the Moon, Mars & Beyond (AMMB) Science Interest Group. Together, these cases point to a paradigm shift: astrophysics from the Moon is becoming not just desirable but necessary.

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