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Very Large Array Gets Expanded Capability
Posted by
Soulskill
on Sun Feb 24, 2008 10:06 AM
from the really-long-distance-calling-plan dept.
from the really-long-distance-calling-plan dept.
Active Seti points out a story about upgrades for the Very Large Array radio telescope. The improvements will increase the VLA's capabilities 10-fold, allowing it to "pick up a cell phone signal on Jupiter." Work on the 28-antenna array is already underway, and it is expected to finish by 2012. From Scientific American:
"Data gathered by all 28 of the 82-foot- (25-meter-) diameter dish antennas are brought to a correlator--a central, special-purpose computer--which merges the input into a form that allows scientists to produce detailed, high-quality images of the astronomical objects under investigation. A new fiber-optic system replaces the older waveguide system for taking data collected by the receivers to the central control building and increases the amount of data that can be delivered from the antenna to the new $17-million correlator being built by Canadian scientists and engineers to handle the increased data flow."
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Very large array (Score:2, Funny)
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??? What, this doesn't look like ascii art at all!
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Using an assignment operator instead of a relational operator, minus 5 geek points.
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Or even "#include " and "double array[UINT_64MAX]"
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Very, Very Large (Score:1)
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If they were to rename it - why not do it in honor of someone instead. Unfortunately Carl Sagan [astro.uson.mx] has already been honored, but there are other persons too...
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Well
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So, it will now be HDVLA :) (Score:2)
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More interesting is (Score:5, Funny)
Of course - even more interesting is WHO has a cellphone on Jupiter!
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pre-emptive cellphone tapping (Score:1)
Even though there isn't a mobile phone network on Jupiter yet, they're taking the initiative and building the infrastructure to be able to tap Jovians' calls when the network does get that far.
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And ultimately, is that cell phone being used to plot a terrorist attack against Earth.
Re:More interesting is (Score:4, Funny)
Bush shouldn't be tapping phones illegally! Waaaa! Waaaa!
Bush shouldn't be tapping phones on Jupiter! Waaaa! Waaaa!
In this time of war, I simply cannot be a part of aiding a surrender to terror.
If we don't illegally tap phones on Jupiter the terrorists win!
-
Parent
Shhh.... (Score:5, Funny)
Awesome (Score:4, Funny)
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Is that better than a fly in outer space? (Score:2)
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,827454,00.html [time.com]
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Obligatory tag? (Score:3, Funny)
In other news (Score:4, Funny)
The improvements will increase the VLA's capabilities 10-fold, allowing it to "pick up a cell phone signal on Jupiter."
The Bush administration pressured Congress to expand the Protect America Act to include Jupiter. Visitors to that planet will now be required to have a US passport to get back in the country.
expanded capability.. umm (Score:2)
But Schrödinger! (Score:3, Funny)
Where will you run to now, terrorists? (Score:1)
Very Large Array... (Score:2)
Not My Phone (Score:1, Funny)
Cell phone signals on jupiter? (Score:3, Interesting)
Sean
The Easy Way (Score:2)
Simple, really... (Score:3, Funny)
They had to change one line of code:
to:Linked list (Score:2, Funny)
Can you hear me now? (Score:2)
I find it hard to belief, pick up a cell phone signal from Jupiter, I still drop calls when driving on the 10 freeway.
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Re:Is this data provided to the SETI@Home folks? (Score:4, Funny)
Parent
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Get an alien-free PSU, or one with a higher treshold.
Of course you could also reduce the load..
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Re:Is this data provided to the SETI@Home folks? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
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I visited the VLA a couple of years ago. Those dishes are freaking huge and you can't get a good prospective of how big they really are until you stand under one. They had a small building for tourists and my friends and I spent about an hour inside learning about the array. They spoke of the impending upgrades on some of the displays. The original design left huge gaps in the radio spectrum and the upgrades
Seconded (Score:2)
Not in a desert (Score:2)
I know I'm nitpicking, but the VLA is not in the desert. There's very little actual desert in New Mexico, all of it in the southern portion of the state. The VLA is in the high arid plains of central New Mexico, specifically the Plains of San Agustin. The reason you can see them so well is that this area is actually a downdropped graben [wikipedia.org] bordered by uplifted volcanic masse. When driving, you come down off the mountains on any side of the basin, and it's a long, slow decline.
The way I really understood
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Isotropic leakage signals are too faint to detect. The garbage people will tell you about aliens watching "I Love Lucy" is just that, garbage. TV signals have degraded into unintelligible nonsense before the even get to the first star.
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