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6.4 Radio telescopes  (Page 2/8)

Radio waves are reflected by conducting surfaces, just as light is reflected from a shiny metallic surface, and according to the same laws of optics. A radio-reflecting telescope consists of a concave metal reflector (called a dish ), analogous to a telescope mirror. The radio waves collected by the dish are reflected to a focus, where they can then be directed to a receiver and analyzed. Because humans are such visual creatures, radio astronomers often construct a pictorial representation of the radio sources they observe. [link] shows such a radio image of a distant galaxy, where radio telescopes reveal vast jets and complicated regions of radio emissions that are completely invisible in photographs taken with light.

Radio image.

This image has been constructed of radio observations at the Very Large Array of a galaxy called Cygnus A. Colors have been added to help the eye sort out regions of different radio intensities. Red regions are the most intense, blue the least. The visible galaxy would be a small dot in the center of the image. The radio image reveals jets of expelled material (more than 160,000 light-years long) on either side of the galaxy. (credit: NRAO/AUI)

Radio astronomy is a young field compared with visible-light astronomy, but it has experienced tremendous growth in recent decades. The world’s largest radio reflectors that can be pointed to any direction in the sky have apertures of 100 meters. One of these has been built at the US National Radio Astronomy Observatory in West Virginia ( [link] ). [link] lists some of the major radio telescopes of the world.

Robert c. byrd green bank telescope.

This fully steerable radio telescope in West Virginia went into operation in August 2000. Its dish is about 100 meters across. (credit: modification of work by “b3nscott”/Flickr)
Major Radio Observatories of the World
Observatory Location Description Website
Individual Radio Dishes
Arecibo Observatory Arecibo, Puerto Rico 305-m fixed dish www.naic.edu
Green Bank Telescope (GBT) Green Bank, WV 110 × 100-m steerable dish www.science.nrao.edu/facilities/gbt
Effelsberg 100-m Telescope Bonn, Germany 100-m steerable dish www.mpifr-bonn.mpg.de/en/effelsberg
Lovell Telescope Manchester, England 76-m steerable dish www.jb.man.ac.uk/aboutus/lovell
Canberra Deep Space Communication Complex (CDSCC) Tidbinbilla, Australia 70-m steerable dish www.cdscc.nasa.gov
Goldstone Deep Space Communications Complex (GDSCC) Barstow, CA 70-m steerable dish www.gdscc.nasa.gov
Parkes Observatory Parkes, Australia 64-m steerable dish www.parkes.atnf.csiro.au
Arrays of Radio Dishes
Square Kilometre Array (SKA) South Africa and Western Australia Thousands of dishes, km 2 collecting area, partial array in 2020 www.skatelescope.org
Atacama Large Millimeter/submillimeter Array (ALMA) Atacama desert, Northern Chile 66 7-m and 12-m dishes www.almaobservatory.org
Very Large Array (VLA) Socorro, New Mexico 27-element array of 25-m dishes (36-km baseline) www.science.nrao.edu/facilities/vla
Westerbork Synthesis Radio Telescope (WSRT) Westerbork, the Netherlands 12-element array of 25-m dishes (1.6-km baseline) www.astron.nl/radio-observatory/public/public-0
Very Long Baseline Array (VLBA) Ten US sites, HI to the Virgin Islands 10-element array of 25-m dishes (9000 km baseline) www.science.nrao.edu/facilities/vlba
Australia Telescope Compact Array (ATCA) Several sites in Australia 8-element array (seven 22-m dishes plus Parkes 64 m) www.narrabri.atnf.csiro.au
Multi-Element Radio Linked Interferometer Network (MERLIN) Cambridge, England, and other British sites Network of seven dishes (the largest is 32 m) www.e-merlin.ac.uk
Millimeter-wave Telescopes
IRAM Granada, Spain 30-m steerable mm-wave dish www.iram-institute.org
James Clerk Maxwell Telescope (JCMT) Mauna Kea, HI 15-m steerable mm-wave dish www.eaobservatory.org/jcmt
Nobeyama Radio Observatory (NRO) Minamimaki, Japan 6-element array of 10-m wave dishes www.nro.nao.ac.jp/en
Hat Creek Radio Observatory (HCRO) Cassel, CA 6-element array of 5-m wave dishes www.sri.com/research-development/specialized-facilities/hat-creek-radio-observatory
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OpenStax, Astronomy. OpenStax CNX. Apr 12, 2017 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11992/1.13
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