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Space Technology

The World's Most Powerful Telescope Just Discovered 1,230 New Galaxies (yahoo.com) 96

An anonymous Slashdot reader quotes a report from Vice: On Saturday night astronomers at the South African MeerKAT radio telescope array fired up 16 of its recently completed dishes and released the first ever image from what is slated to become the world's most powerful radio telescope. The initial results were incredibly promising: operating with only one quarter of the 64 dishes that will eventually comprise MeerKAT, the telescope was able to find 1300 galaxies in a small corner of the universe where only 70 galaxies were known to exist previously.
Slashdot reader schwit1 quotes a report Agence France-Presse: MeerKAT's full contingent of 64 receptors will be integrated next year into a multi-nation Square Kilometer Array (SKA) which is is set to become the world's most powerful radio telescope. The images produced by MeerKAT "are far better that we could have expected," the chief scientist of the SKA in South Africa, Fernando Camilo said at the site of the dishes near the small town of Carnarvon, 600 kilometres north of Cape Town. When fully up and running in the 2020s, the SKA... will have a discovery potential 10,000 times greater than the most advanced modern instruments and will explore exploding stars, black holes, dark energy and traces of the universe's origins some 14 billion years ago.
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The World's Most Powerful Telescope Just Discovered 1,230 New Galaxies

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  • Now Twitter has to top that and build an array with 128 receptors.

  • Slashcode, *sigh* (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sootman ( 158191 ) on Sunday July 17, 2016 @04:58PM (#52529463) Homepage Journal

    "... the worldÃ(TM)s most powerful radio telescope..."

    Yeah. That character encoding will get you every time. Maybe you should have hit 'preview'?

    Look: I *know* character encoding is hard. But the simple ones -- curly quotes, en- and em-dashes, etc. -- are a SOLVED PROBLEM. A bunch of open-source rich-text editors solved this AGES ago. Maybe a DECADE ago by now. A few basics will save you in 99 cases out of 100.

    • Problem is, the preview probably showed the text as it was input, with proper encoding. At least, that's what I saw testing the story submit right now in Firefox version 47 on Linux. So it must only be after the submission goes through that the encoding is broke. I know that “this” shows the expected quote marks in the comment preview, but don't know how it will look when submitted.

      This is an area where EditorDavid should have corrected the submission, though.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Bring back timothy

      • Can you think of a good reason why the preview should do a different transformation to the actual post?

        N.B. I said a good reason. Some fuckhead doing copy-paste rather than using a subroutine and they've subsequently drifted apart is only a reason.

  • Already KAT-7, the seven test radio telescopes that preceded this was sensitive enough to make new discoveries. And it's only going to get better from here, with the full SKA operational it'll be a new world for radio astronomy.

  • You can tell from the pixels this is fake
  • Yet, still 0% discovered if we assume the universe is infinite. Anything divided by infinite equals 0.

    • by colinwb ( 827584 )
      "Anything divided by infinite equals 0" -- Large correction: not necessarily. For example, using a non-standard model of the rational (or real) numbers:
      (a) any positive finite non-zero number divided by a positive infinite number is a positive infinitesimal number, that is a number greater than 0 but smaller than any positive "standard" number;
      (b) if n is a positive infinite number and N is a greater infinite number then N/n is greater than or equal to some finite positive standard number, and might be in
    • Yet, still 0% discovered if we assume the universe is infinite. Anything divided by infinite equals 0.

      The space might be infinite but there are a finite number of things in it.

    • if we assume the universe is infinite.

      If you assume that, then I am sure that you have a good reason for making that assumption. What is your reason - or reasons?

      I see no reason to make that assumption.

      • by ls671 ( 1122017 )

        Please don't talk about things your humain brain can't understand and have a look at my signature.

        Cheers and have a nice day! ;-)

  • Once upon a time (15+ years ago) this kind of topic would have garnered a lot of interesting discussion. Slowly but surely the posts have become less informed and more cynical. Now a topic like this just generates a raft of cynical stupidity. Not even sure why I come here anymore.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You come here because as bad as it is, it is far better than comment boards on general news sites and youtube. Though I agree, it is getting harder to tell the difference.

  • Little thing, but what an amazing name for a telescope. According to the site [ska.ac.za], it's 'more KAT' (the original name for the array), as well as, of course, the unbearably cute mammal that lives in the area. But that, along with the "standing up to look around" mission of the array itself makes me absolutely convinced that I live in a novel of some sort (most likely Dickens, who liked to name his characters with oddly appropriate names (I'm lookin' at you, Ms. Malaprop)).
    • That is correct, meerkat is a loanword in English from Afrikaans (there aren't many but this is one of the few - others include zebra and veld), KAT was the first, tiny stage of the array, and 'meer' is the Afrikaans for 'more' (also for 'lake' for some reason) - meerKAT then is, indeed, a cute and clever name.

      • by dave420 ( 699308 )

        German has a similar pair: 'mehr' (more) and 'Meer' (sea/ocean). English also has something similar, but less obvious: 'more' and 'marine' (from the latin 'Mare' meaning sea).

        • German has a similar pair:

          You are aware that Afrikaans is southern-exported Swamp German? It's al lot closer to German than English or Norwegian are.

  • 1230 new galaxies. So that's about 100 thousand million stars in EACH galaxy? This is simply mind boggling.
  • I'm an old and obnoxious astronomer so I'm going to make the obligatory complaint about the oxymoronic term "radio telescope". "Tele" refers to the visual spectrum of light, not radio. The MeerKAT is, in fact, a radio interferometer.

    Please proceed to contradict and/or down vote this post. Your cooperation is assumed.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      To be pedantic, not "tele" refers to the visual spectrum but "scope". Ancient Greek "tele" means "far" and "skopos" means "watcher". I have no problem with extending "watcher" to the non-visual part of the spectrum, it's closer than "listener" or othert terms related to human sense organs.

    • Dear Mr Old and Obnoxious astronomer, please take note that tele doesn't refer to the visible spectrum of light, nor does it refer to electromagnetic radiation. It is a prefix coming from the Greek word tele meaning far.

      The second part of the word, scope, is derived from the Latin and Greek words scopium and skopein meaning to look at

      So the combined word telescope means to look at far/distant, nothing more, nothing less, and that is why we have optical telescopes (for optical distant viewing), radio teles

    • by dave420 ( 699308 )

      Don't forget 'confused by Greek' when describing yourself in the future :)

  • "The world's most powerful telescope just discovered 1230 new galaxies"

    C'mon, they couldn't discover 4 more?

  • Shoot, there went the neighborhood!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    http://www.ska.ac.za/releases/20160716.php [ska.ac.za] shows a small patch of it and says that image "spans about the area of the Earth's moon". Assuming they meant to say the moon's diameter it would mean that the big image is approximately 3 degrees square.

    It would be nice to know exactly where that patch of sky is though; to match it up with a visible image.

"What man has done, man can aspire to do." -- Jerry Pournelle, about space flight

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