The Daily Courier

Students help observator­y stay at forefront of research

- KEN Ken Tapping is an astronomer with the National Research Council’s Dominion Radio Astrophysi­cal Observator­y, near Penticton.

Every Friday we have a Dominion Radio Astrophysi­cal Observator­y science meeting.

At the moment these are mainly done using Zoom. After the usual organizati­onal stuff that starts all staff meetings, the rest of the time is dedicated to project and science reports, where people report on what they are up to and what interestin­g new scientific findings they have made.

Much of this part of the meeting covers reports by students who are working at DRAO.

Some of them are co-op students, where working terms at the observator­y as part of their degree studies.

Others are graduate students, working towards their doctorates. Finally there are some post-docs. These are people who got their doctorates recently and are at the launching point in their careers as scientists.

They are all at DRAO because their career plans involve not only pure research, but also gaining experience on working with radio telescopes and the data they produce, and also the design and operation of the instrument­s we attach to those telescopes when making observatio­ns.

These are the people who will define the future course of Canadian astronomy, and play a key role in implementi­ng the new instrument­ation needed for working at the astronomic­al frontiers.

Most astronomer­s are “pure researcher­s”. They do not have a close relationsh­ip with instrument­ation. Questions arising during their work lead to the need for new observatio­ns.

To address this they look at observing facilities around the world to determine which of them has the instrument­ation to address those questions. These days, this is normally done by referring to the observator­y web sites. They then apply for observing time, and if the applicatio­ns are approved, the observatio­ns are carried out.

It used to be that the astronomer needed to be at the observator­y to oversee the observatio­ns, but since the operation of modern telescopes is now exclusivel­y done by trained, onsite staff, the researcher usually stays home and receives the data over the Internet.

The astronomic­al community as a whole settles on the “big questions” we should be looking at over coming decades, but it requires scientists who understand telescopes and instrument­ation to turn those questions into equipment that can be used to address them.

This is where those students come in. They, along with their peers will make sure Canada remains in the forefront of instrument design. Without them, we will be mere passengers on the astronomy ship. With them we help design and build the ship, and help set the course.

There is another angle; modern astronomy works at the cutting edge of technology, digital signal processing and imaging. This includes antenna design, and developmen­t of high-sensitivit­y receivers, software and computing equipment.

Much of this is applicable outside astronomy, for example in communicat­ions, medical and other imaging, environmen­tal sensing and consumer electronic­s. A lot of the equipment is built by industry, transferri­ng knowledge that can be used to develop new products and devices.

Today, most front-line astronomic­al facilities are internatio­nal collaborat­ions. Canada is a partner in several of them, contributi­ng technology and operationa­l support.

DRAO is a purely national facility, which means we decide what it does and which way it will evolve. This also gives us flexibilit­y as to how we can address the training of future technicall­y literate astronomer­s and astronomic­ally literate engineers. A big plus is that the techniques and devices developed by the students and post-docs are often tested and deployed at DRAO. This helps the observator­y stay relevant in an age where scientific discovery is moving faster than at any time in our history. —————

Mercury lurks low in the dawn glow, with Venus higher and brighter. To Venus’ right, lie Mars and Jupiter, close together, then Saturn. The moon will be full on Tuesday.

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