The world's largest radio telescope project
The world's largest radio telescope SKA (Square Kilometer Array) will be located in Australia or South Africa. Project director Richard Schilizzi just said this.
The world's largest radio telescope SKA (Square Kilometer Array) will be located in Australia or South Africa. Project director Richard Schilizzi just said this.
The international project, worth $ 1 billion, will install hundreds of antennae distributed over a distance of more than 3,000km. More than half of the antennas will be located in a central area 5km wide.
SKA will be 50 times more accurate than the largest radio telescope currently located at the Arecibo Observatory in Puerto Rico.
Source: nouvelobs China and an Argentine-Brazilian association also embraced the telescope reception. The construction will begin in 2010. The telescope will operate in 2020.
Selected conditions for the installation location are not contaminated by human radio waves capable of obscuring weak waves from the universe. 'Only Australia and South Africa can meet the requirements of SKA,' said Professor Schilizzi in a notice board sent to Paris.
The final decision on the location of the SKA installation will be made by a committee of 5 scientists from 5 years of the country at the end of this decade. Australia proposed the location of Mileura 100km west of Meekathara, while South Africa offered the position of Karoo 95km from Carnavon.
When collecting electromagnetic waves emitted by celestial bodies, SKA will allow to improve knowledge of the universe's childhood, to find mysterious dark energy that causes the rapid increase of galaxies and detectors. find gravitational waves mentioned in relativity. This project also contributes to the quest for intelligent life outside the solar system.
The SKA project is funded by the United States (33%), Europe (33%), Australia (9.5%), Canada (9.5%), China (4.8%), India ( 4.8%) and South Africa (4.8%).
- Canada participates in manufacturing the largest radio telescope
- The world's largest telescope operates
- Chile radio telescope reaches maximum capacity
- Australia, South Africa build super telescopes
- Commencement of the world's largest telescope project in Chile
- China participates in finding aliens near abnormal star reduction
- Neutron stars can bounce radio waves to Earth
- The world's largest alien hunting telescope was born
- Giant telescope captures signals from the universe
- China relocated more than 9,000 people to hunt people out of space
Scientists discover a photon traveling back in time Is the moon also affected by the Covid-19 epidemic? NASA shuts down plasma device to save spacecraft 20.5 billion kilometers away Surprised to know the identity of the Russian missile debris 'hunter' A giant meteorite once crashed into Earth, 200 times larger than the meteorite that wiped out the dinosaurs. Discovery suggests: Earth may escape after Sun turns into red giant ESA launches Hera spacecraft to study how to protect Earth A star will explode in 2024, visible to the naked eye