Jumat, 25 Mei 2012

New Telescope To Be in South Africa, Australia

New Telescope To Be in South Africa, Australia

ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), the world’s most advanced ground-based facility for astronomy.

ESO’s Very Large Telescope (VLT), the world’s most advanced ground-based facility for astronomy.

By MIKE CORDER, Associated Press

AMSTERDAM (AP) â€" A giant radio telescope made up of thousands of separate dishes and intended to help scientists answer fundamental questions about the make-up of the universe will be built and based in both Australia and South Africa, the international consortium overseeing the project announced Friday.

The Square Kilometer Array telescope will be 50 times more sensitive and scan the sky 10,000 times faster than any existing telescope. Not a long tube with an eye piece, the telescope is instead a huge collection of dishes with a combined surface area of one square kilometer (0.39 square miles) that don't all have to be in the same place.

[Read: Scientists To Use Moons as Mirrors to Discover Life in Deep Space.]

John Womersley, chair of the consortium's board, said the telescope will help scientists answer key questions: "Where do we come from? Where are we going? What is this universe we live in?"

"We don't understand what 96 percent of our universe is made of," he said.

The organization, made up of scientific organizations from around the world, said in a statement that dividing construction of the telescope will "maximize on investments already made by both Australia and South Africa."

The decision appeared to be a compromise as Australia and New Zealand had been vying with South Africa for the honor of hosting the €1.5 billion ($1.88 billion) telescope, which will be made up of some 3,000 separate 15-meter (49-foot) diameter dishes.

Most of the dishes built in the first phase of construction, scheduled to start in 2019, will be in South Africa, the organization said.

Womersley said that splitting construction between the two nations will likely add around 10 percent to the €350 million ($439 million) cost of the first phase of building the giant telescope.

But he said there would be a pay-off for astronomers.

"It delivers more science in phase one. The capabilities of this instrument are greater than the original design," Womersley said.

South Africa's science minister, Naledi Pandor, said the decision to split the project, with one of three components in Australia and the remaining two in Africa, was a surprise. She said an assessment had shown Africa was the best site, and that the goal had been to find a single site.

[Read: Space Telescope Finds Its First Extrasolar Planets.]

But, she added, "we accept the compromise in the interest of progress and as an acknowledgement, we believe of the sterling work done by our scientists and the excellent SKA team."

Australia's bid also involves building some parts of the telescope in New Zealand.

All three countries offer the kind of terrain radio telescopes need to work best â€" huge open spaces with very few humans.

Australian government representative Patricia Kelly said the remote site in Western Australia state is about the size of the Netherlands and has a population of 300 people.

Michiel van Haarlem, Interim Director General of the SKA Organisation, said the telescope "will transform our view of the universe. With it we will see back to the moments after the Big Bang and discover previously unexplored parts of the cosmos."

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Associated Press writer Donna Bryson contributed from Pretoria, South Africa.

Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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