At sufficiently low frequencies, no ground-based radio array will be able to
produce high resolution images while looking through the ionosphere. A
space-based array will be needed to explore the objects and processes which
dominate the sky at the lowest radio frequencies. An imaging radio
interferometer based on a large number of small, inexpensive satellites would
be able to track solar radio bursts associated with coronal mass ejections out
to the distance of Earth, determine the frequency and duration of early epochs
of nonthermal activity in galaxies, and provide unique information about the
interstellar medium. This would be a "space-space" VLBI mission, as only
baselines between satellites would be used. Angular resolution would be limited
only by interstellar and interplanetary scattering.Comment: To appear in "Astrophysical Phenomena Revealed by Space VLBI", ed. H.
Hirabayashi, P. Edwards, and D. Murphy (ISAS, Japan