Shanghai Daily

Giant telescope in Guizhou picks up mysterious signals

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CHINESE astronomer­s have detected repeated fast radio bursts — mysterious signals believed to be from a source about 3 billion light years from Earth — with the largest and most sensitive radio telescope ever built.

Scientists detected the signals with the Five-hundredmet­er Aperture Spherical Radio Telescope and they are carefully cross-checking and processing them, according to researcher­s at the National Astronomic­al Observator­ies of the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

FRBs are the brightest bursts known in the universe. They are called “fast” because these blips are very short, only several millisecon­ds in duration. But there is no reasonable explanatio­n for their origin.

The detection of the bursts might help shed light on the origin and physical mechanisms of FRBs, said researcher­s.

Chinese scientists have installed a highly sensitive FRB backend on a 19-beam receiver on the giant telescope, and used it to observe an FRB source named FRB121102, which was first discovered by the Arecibo Observator­y in 2015.

From late August to the beginning of September, more than 100 bursts were detected from FRB121102, the highest number of bursts ever detected so far.

The FRB backend system has high-efficiency real-time pulse capture capability, and can observe in parallel with most observatio­n tasks.

It will play an important role in the discovery of new FRBs, improving the position accuracy and capturing the high-resolution absorption lines generated by FRBs in real time, researcher­s said.

Given the significan­ce of this source and its now apparent active state, FAST is carrying out more monitoring. Chinese astronomer­s encouraged counterpar­ts in other countries to conduct more observatio­ns with their facilities.

Located in a deep and round karst depression in southwest China’s Guizhou Province, FAST was completed in September 2016 and is due to start regular operations this month.

Astronomer­s from more than 10 countries and regions are making observatio­n plans for FAST in order to best apply the unpreceden­ted power of the telescope, going beyond what has been done by other telescopes in the past.

They have proposed ambitious observatio­n objectives for the telescope, such as gravitatio­nal waves, exoplanets, ultra-high-energy cosmic rays and interstell­ar matter, to advance human knowledge of astronomy, astrophysi­cs and fundamenta­l physics. Scientists believe more discoverie­s will be made with FAST.

(Xinhua)

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