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Monday, 5 December 2022
‘Are we alone in the universe?’: Work begins in Western Australia on world’s most powerful radio telescope.
Mon 5 Dec 2022 06.00 AEDTLast modified on Mon 5 Dec 2022 06.02 AEDTConstruction
of the world’s largest radio astronomy observatory, the Square
Kilometre Array (SKA), has officially begun in Australia after three
decades in development.
A huge intergovernmental effort, the SKA has been hailed as one of the biggest scientific projects
of this century. It will enable scientists to look back to early in the
history of the universe when the first stars and galaxies were formed.
It will also be used to investigate dark energy and why the universe is expanding, and to potentially search for extraterrestrial life.
The SKA will initially involve two telescopes arrays – one on Wajarri country in remote Western Australia, called SKA-Low, comprising 131,072 tree-like antennas.
SKA-Low
is so named for its sensitivity to low frequency radio signals. It will
be eight times as sensitive than existing comparable telescopes and
will map the sky 135 times faster.
A second array of 197 traditional dishes, SKA-Mid, will be built in South Africa’s Karoo region.
The Australian minister of industry and
science, Ed Husic, and the director general of the SKA Organisation,
Prof Philip Diamond, are expected to mark the start of construction of
SKA-Low at an on-site event in Western Australia on Monday morning.
Dr
Sarah Pearce, director of the SKA-Low telescope, said in a statement
that the observatory would “define the next fifty years for radio
astronomy, charting the birth and death of galaxies, searching for new
types of gravitational waves and expanding the boundaries of what we
know about the universe”.
“The SKA telescopes
will be sensitive enough to detect an airport radar on a planet circling
a star tens of light years away, so may even answer the biggest
question of all: are we alone in the universe?”
The SKA has been described by scientists as a gamechanger and a major milestone in astronomy research.
Prof
Lisa Harvey-Smith, an astronomer at the University of New South Wales,
called it a “a momentous day for global astronomy”, adding: “Over a
thousand people have worked for 20 years to make this a reality – and
each will be feeling proud of this collective achievement today.”
Dr
Danny Price, a senior postdoctoral fellow at the Curtin Institute of
Radio Astronomy, said the SKA’s sensitivity would allow astronomers to
peer back billions of years to the “cosmic dawn”, when the first stars in the universe were forming.
“To
put the sensitivity of the SKA into perspective, [it] could detect a
mobile phone in the pocket of an astronaut on Mars, 225m kilometres
away,” Price said in a statement. “More excitingly, if there are
intelligent societies on nearby stars with technology similar to ours,
the SKA could detect the aggregate ‘leakage’ radiation from their radio
and telecommunication networks – the first telescope sensitive enough to
achieve this feat.”
Prof Alan Duffy, director
of the space technology and industry institute at the Swinburne
University of Technology, said the SKA would probably be the largest
telescope ever constructed, “connecting across continents to create a
world-spanning facility allowing us to see essentially across the entire
observable universe”.
“The science goals are
as vast as the telescope itself, from searching for forming planets and
signs of alien life, to mapping out the cosmic web of dark matter and
the growing of galaxies within those vast universe-spanning filaments,”
Duffy said in a statement.
“Just as with
Hubble, the biggest discoveries by such next-generation telescopes are
of things entirely unknown to science today. Astronomers worldwide will
be celebrating this groundbreaking [development] for what it will mean
for scientists in the decades ahead.”
In Australia, the SKA Organisation is collaborating with the CSIRO to build and operate the telescopes.
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