Science drivers
Black holes, relativistic jets, star and planet formation, evolved stars, and other compact structures requiring extreme angular resolution.
The Space Array initiative explores how distributed spacecraft, precision formation flying, high-frequency receivers, and advanced correlation techniques could enable transformational angular resolution from space.
Black holes, relativistic jets, star and planet formation, evolved stars, and other compact structures requiring extreme angular resolution.
From focused demonstrators to ambitious multi-spacecraft observatories, the initiative studies credible paths toward a future space array.
Key enabling technologies include inter-satellite metrology, time and frequency transfer, data transport, correlation, orbit determination, and imaging.
Recent progress in small satellites, precision navigation, optical links, high-performance computing, and millimetre/sub-millimetre instrumentation makes it timely to revisit space interferometry as a coordinated, long-term programme.
High-frequency phase stable imaging will breakthrough the current understanding of the mystery of astrophysical sources.
The goal of this website is to provide a public entry point for the initiative: the scientific motivation, candidate mission concepts, technical challenges, workshops, references, and ways to get involved.
Technical reports, white papers, presentations, publications, and workshop proceedings are archived through the Space Array Zenodo Community.