SpaceRef - Space News as it Happens · About Us · Advertising · Contact Us · Comments Tuesday, February 9, 2010    
 

Advertisement
SpaceRef - Your Space Reference
Home | More News - Upcoming Events - Space Station - Get our Daily Newsletter | RSS/XML News Feeds Available

Buy a - SpaceRef Mug - Arthur Clarke Mars Greenhouse Mug - SpaceRef T-Shirt - NASA STS-128 Store
Massive telescope project, Square Kilometer Array, gets federal research contract to pursue U.S. design

 
PRESS RELEASE
Date Released: Wednesday, November 13, 2002
Source: Cornell University

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded $1.5 million over three years to help support early development of a massive new radio telescope by a Cornell University-led U.S. consortium of 10 universities and institutions. The proposed telescope would have 100 times the sensitivity of today's best radio telescopes, enabling it to "see" back to a primeval epoch by detecting galaxies in the early universe and hydrogen gas before it formed in the galaxies.

The telescope, the Square Kilometer Array (SKA), would cost in the area of $1 billion and would be among the largest scientific instruments ever assembled. Eight national consortia from around the world are competing for the winning design and the site, which are not likely to be chosen until about 2007.

Part of the NSF funding will be used to investigate feed antennas and low-temperature receivers, says James Cordes, professor of astronomy at Cornell, who is principal investigator on the research agency's award. The funding also will be used to investigate the problem of radio frequency (RF) interference that the SKA, with its wide bandwidth, will be subject to. "Part of the NSF funds will be used for taking data, acquiring data with existing facilities such as the Arecibo Observatory, and using prototypes for excising RF," says Cordes.

The many problems that the development of the SKA will face depend on both its design and its siting. The U.S. consortium, chaired by Yervant Terzian, the David C. Duncan Professor in the Physical Sciences at Cornell, is discussing a telescope made up of about 100 stations, each made up of several hundred antennas, and spread out over a continentwide distance. In this way the antennas would form a telescope, called an interferometer, in which radio signals from distant objects in the universe are captured by separate antennas and brought together at a central processor. Indeed, the SKA would be by far the largest interferometer ever built. (Although the array would cover an immense area, the actual collecting surfaces would cover a square kilometer, if placed end to end.) "The U.S. concept is that if we can design a basic building block -- consisting of a single antenna -- we will need to stamp out many thousands of them," says Cordes. The challenge, he observes, is to design an antenna and the receiver system that will go with it, plus all of the necessary digital electronics, that would keep the cost of the SKA at $1 billion, an extremely low cost by current radio telescope standards. "We need to make the cost per square meter as small as possible," says Cordes.

The NSF funding, he says, will be used to investigate such a design, with some of the work being carried out at Cornell by Cordes and by German Cortes-Medellin, a senior research associate with the National Astronomy and Ionosphere Center (NAIC) at Cornell, which manages the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico for the NSF. Cordes will be collaborating with John Dickey, professor of astronomy at the University of Minnesota, and Steven Ellingson, a research scientist at Ohio State University, and with researchers at another NSF facility, the National Radio Astronomy Observatory in Socorro, N.M. All collaborating institutions are members of the U.S. SKA consortium.

At a recent meeting of the consortium at Cornell, Terzian noted that the Southwest United States is a strong contender for the site of the SKA. The general siting criteria, he explained, include both construction and operating costs, as well as finding a site for "the best science." The data that will be acquired in coming months, he said, will include wind data, radio quietness, RF surveys, nature conservancy, labor costs and the costs of fiber optics. However, notes Cordes, there will be insufficient funds in the initial NSF grant to pay for the actual site testing. This would be covered by a second proposal that has been submitted to the NSF.

Wearing his other hat as chairman of the international site selection committee, Terzian said there will be an international gathering of the consortia (from the United States, Canada, Europe, India, China and Australia) at the Arecibo Observatory, Puerto Rico, in January to discuss the process of making the selections for the location of the SKA.

In the meantime, Cordes and his colleagues also are considering what would be a "realistic" scientific program for the SKA. "We want to see what the universe looked like before the galaxies were formed," he says. "One of our scientific goals is to nail down when the epoch of reionization took place. This will be part of the process of mapping out the whole timeline for hydrogen in the universe."

Other members of the U.S. consortium, besides Cornell, Ohio State and the University of Minnesota, are the California Institute of Technology, Harvard-Smithsonian Center for Astrophysics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Naval Research Laboratory, SETI Institute, the University of California-Berkeley and the University of New Mexico. For more details see http://www.usska.org/main.html.


Share and Enjoy: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages.
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Reddit
  • Slashdot
  • StumbleUpon
  • Technorati
  • TwitThis
  • Fark
  • Google
  • Live
  • YahooMyWeb

Mercury - Venus - The Moon - Mars - Jupiter - Saturn - Pluto

RADWIN empowers service providers so they can deliver high speed Wireless broadband Access services.

Find hose reels and watering systems

Quality leather chairs in a variety of styles.


 


News from Commercial Space Watch

- Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne's Space Shuttle Main Engines Power Delivery of Robotic Control Station and Module

- NASA Ames Hosts Wind Tunnel Tests to Improve Semi-Trucks' Fuel Efficiency

- Spotlighting ESA's year of technology innovations

- NASA Solicitation: Mars Mission Organics Detection Instrument

- NASA Award: Recovery Act: Active Electromechanical Suspension System for Planetary Rovers

- NASA Solicitation: Science Evaluation Asessments Studies Services and Support

- NASA Solicitation: Poly-Picosatellite Orbital Deployer NPP Mission Support

- NASA Award: Recovery Act: Radiation Resistant Reconfigurable Shape Memory Rubber Space Arrays

- NASA Award: Recovery Act: Odor Control in Spacecraft Waste Management

- NASA Award: Recovery Act: Automated Hybrid Microwave Heating for Lunar Surface Solidification

- NASA Recovery Act: Self-deploying Composite Habitats

- NASA Synopsis: Industry Conference Sponsorship

- Zero Gravity Corporation Brings Sky High Adventure To Sin City With Exclusive Weightless Flight, February 27

- Boeing Prepares Last Major Piece of Hardware for International Space Station

- NASA Expendable Launch Vehicle Status Report 5 Feb 2010

- Decorate your home with nautical decor

- Dieses Portal stellt Ihnen die besten online Casino Bonus und Pokerräume im Internet vor.

- Play free bingo games and black out bingo.

- 220Marketing specializes in providing mortgage marketing for mortgage companies and managers.

- TV Stands


advertisment

Learning About Telescopes

Learn about Telescopes

Recent Press Releases

A New 3D Map of Interstellar Gas Within 300 Parsecs of the Sun

Aderholt Statement On The President's NASA Budget Proposal To Cut Constellation

Pratt & Whitney Rocketdyne's Space Shuttle Main Engines Power Delivery of Robotic Control Station and Module

NASA Joins Austin Marathon Expo, Inspires Students

NASA Talk: Could Electronic Systems Collapse Worldwide? (new date)

Porters Tahoe is the premier online dealer for Skis and Burton Snowboards, visit PortersTahoe.com!

Tax Free Cigarettes

Looking for TV Trays. Find a wide selection

Bingo world tour - The most comprehensive guide to Play Online Bingo Games

Find a number of writing desks for sale

the best online casinos guide on the internet offering higher payouts than any land based casino.

Paradise Style Group - wedding and special occasion dresses.

Design and Sell Merchandise Online for Free


Copyright © 1999-2010 SpaceRef Interactive Inc. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy