Very long baseline interferometry (VLBI) is like using two super-sensitive ears to hear a whisper from across town.
Imagine you and your friend are both listening to the same whisper. You're in one part of the city, and your friend is in another. Even though the whisper is quiet, when you both listen at the same time, you can figure out where it came from, maybe even how far away it was!
VLBI works like that. Scientists use radio telescopes spread across big distances, sometimes even around the world, to listen to radio waves coming from space. Each telescope records the signal, and then scientists compare them later, just like you and your friend comparing what you heard.
How It's Like Using a Super-Ear
Think of each radio telescope as an ear. If both ears hear the same sound at slightly different times, it helps figure out where that sound came from, kind of like how your brain tells you where a sound is coming from by comparing which ear hears it first.
By combining signals from far apart, scientists can see things in space with super sharp vision, almost as if they had one giant telescope the size of Earth!
Examples
- Like using two pairs of binoculars together to see something tiny.
- It's like combining multiple microphones to hear a whisper from far away.
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See also
- How Can You Hear Music from Space?
- Why Can't We Just Send Messages Across the Universe?
- Black Holes Explained: What Is a Black Hole? How They Form in Space?
- Differences Between Spiral And Elliptical Galaxies?
- Astronomy Activity: Solar System, Galaxy, Universe: What's the Difference?