Giant telescope to focus on big unknowns of universe

The sun drifts toward setting behind telescopes at the summit of Maunakea on July 14. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones, File)

This undated illustration shows the proposed giant telescope on Maunakea. (TMT/ via AP, File)

A telescope at the summit of Maunakea on July 14. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones, File)

FILE - In this Aug. 31, 2015, file photo, telescopes are viewed on Mauna Kea, the proposed construction site for a new $1.4 billion telescope. Scientists are expected to explore fundamental questions about our universe when they use a giant new telescope planned for the summit of Hawaii’s tallest mountain. That includes whether there’s life outside our solar system and how stars and galaxies formed in the earliest years of the universe. But some Native Hawaiians don’t want the Thirty Meter Telescope to be built at Mauna Kea’s summit, saying it will further harm a place they consider sacred. (AP Photo/Caleb Jones, File)

HONOLULU — Is there life on planets outside our solar system? How did stars and galaxies form in the earliest years of the universe? How do black holes shape galaxies?