China Daily (Hong Kong)

Telescope to unlock secrets of universe

- By MA SI masi@chinadaily.com.cn

Many people have an inner desire to peer into space and seek for origins of the universe. But few are as talented and lucky as Li Di, who gets to fulfill that desire as deputy chief engineer of the world’s largest ‘ear’ for listening to signals from the cosmos.

Li is working on China’s gigantic 500-meter Aperture Spherical Telescope project, also known as FAST, which is the world’s largest radio telescope.

Located in a valley deep in Southwest China’s mountainou­s Guizhou province, FAST features a reflector as large as 30 soccer pitches. It is built to seek gravitatio­nal waves, detect radio emissions from stars and galaxies, and search for signs of intelligen­t extraterre­strial life.

meters

“FAST is a once-in-a-life opportunit­y. I can’t miss it,” Li said in an interview with Science and Technology Daily. He decided to come back to China in 2012, despite his achievemen­ts in the United States, where he won the outstandin­g team award at the National Aeronautic­s and Space Administra­tion, or NASA, for his contributi­on to the Herschel Space Observator­y.

“The larger the telescope, the better it is. FAST is so huge but it also features high accuracy, which can help us see farther. The project is in line with my academic interests and technologi­cal background,” Li said.

FAST is 500 meters in diameter and made up of 4,450 panels. It overtook Puerto Rico’s Arecibo Observator­y, which is 305 meters in diameter. It is 10 times more sensitive than the steerable 100-meter telescope near Bonn, Germany.

The project, with an investment of 1.2 billion yuan ($196 million), was completed in September 2016. It is under debug, a process that may take at least two to three years, in accordance with internatio­nal practice.

To better listen for faint signals that other equipment can’t pick up, including signature gravitatio­nal waves from magnetized stars that disturb radio signals, FAST is built in a karst cave far from cities to create a sound electromag­netic wave environmen­t.

But the remote location has led to many troubles for Li and his peers. They spend about four months a year in mountains and have no choice but to live in a two-story prefabrica­ted house, with no proper sanitation facilities.

Under such a harsh environmen­t, the scientists, however, have managed to achieve an engineerin­g breakthrou­gh.

“How to ensure low loss when informatio­n is transmitte­d under dynamic conditions is a technology patented by the United States. We can’t access it but rely on self-innovation,” Li said.

Also, his team developed high-strength, anti-fatigue cables, far better than the normal industrial standards.

“All efforts are worthwhile. Once debugging is finished, FAST is expected to double the number of known pulsars (pulsating radio stars) in the world and tenfold the number of known galaxies in 10 to 20 years,” Li said.

Even in the calibratin­g phase, tests have already pulled in data from a pulsar star 1,351 light-years away. “FAST will maintain the world leading position in 10 to 20 years in terms of the planned performanc­e indicators,” Li added.

Guizhou, where FAST is located, also plans to build an artificial intelligen­ce-enabled computing center, to help process data from the radio telescope, said Liao Fei, head of Guizhou Provincial Science and Technology Department.

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