UK Upgrades Radio Telescope Network 21
armacc writes "From the BBC, work has started to use optical fibres to link up the giant radio telescope at Jodrell Bank with five others that are scattered across England. The telescopes comprise an array called Merlin that combines the data from each so they perform as a larger telescope. The telescopes are currently linked by microwaves but replacing them with optical fibres will be a revolution. Astronomers say the new project, e-Merlin, will be a great leap in Jodrell Bank's ability to look out into space."
Jodi's listening (Score:3, Funny)
But even with the upgrade (Score:5, Funny)
How far back... (Score:3, Interesting)
Current and future telescopes. (Score:3, Informative)
The ability to see great distances requires a large number of photons to be collected (to pick up faint signals and better separate signal from noise), which requires a large aperture area. They're not getting that here, so they won't be able to see much farther.
What they _do_ get by using radio telescopes in tandem is a much larger effective aperture _diameter_, which lets them resolve finer details. What was once a blob or a point source of r
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:2)
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:2)
Once we can reliably produce computers that are smarter than we are, it's only a matter of time before they dominate society's workings. This isn't neces
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:2)
If you RTFAs you should have noticed numerous references to the increased sensitivity of the new system in addition to the increased resolution. Only 0.5% of the data can be transferred from one telescope to another over the current microwave lin
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:2)
Unless they are linking thousands of telescopes, they are getting one *hell* of a lot larger boost in resolution than they are in light-gathering power by linking telescopes. S:N improves as the square root of light-gathering power, further reducing the resulting improvement in sensitivity.
My point stands. Have a nice day.
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:3, Insightful)
If this was themlinking the telescopes up for the first time you'd have a pont, but they already have the resolution, they already to interferrometry on the array. They aren't, so far as I can see, adding extra, further away, telescopes to the array which is what would be needed for better resolution.
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:2)
Dr. Philip Diamond, Director of the MERLIN/VLBI National Facility added: "In combination with the newly resurfaced 76m Lovell telescope, the upgrade will give a 30-fold increase in sensitivity.
In fact, there are no references to the resolution increasing. This stems from the fact that the telescopes are already being combined together for interferometry and so the system is already at its max resolution. As /. user R_caley correctly noted, "They are
Re:Current and future telescopes. (Score:2)
Let me spell this out for you.
A data transfer bottleneck makes interferometry suck just as much as it makes light-gathering suck, because in both cases you're throwing away most of your data.
An effective increase in signal-gathering capability by the factor of 30 you quote gives an increase in ability to distinguish signal from noise of about 5.5 (signal goes up as N, noise goes up as root N). This is piddling compared to the fact that, being no longe
Re:How far back... (Score:2)
How far back... (Score:1, Redundant)
Use the things name Daggumit! (Score:3, Informative)
The state of science journalism is bad enough, but this is
I know I'm nitpicking, but we have words for things, and we should use them!
And in an effort to be ontopic, hooray for the efficient utilization of existing resources!
Re:Use the things name Daggumit! (Score:3, Interesting)
Calling it a "phased antenna array" is perfectly valid. Just depends on whether you're talking to an astronomer or an electrical engineer
Also, I believe you're overestimating the technical savvy of most slashdot readers. Know thy audience.
All you say is true (Score:2)
And true, we are not all Edwin Hubble here on
It's like the nuggets you read about in forbes,
Re:Use the things name Daggumit! (Score:2)
Umm...it is an array. (Score:2)
IARA*, and "array", or "interferometric array", are the most commonly used terms, although interferometer is also used. The difference is that an interferometer can be just 2 antennas, while an array implies more than that, i.e. an interferometer that is an array is an array of interferometers. The more antennas, the better, because high quality imaging requires reasonable sampling of the area that the sim
This is a general trend (Score:1, Informative)