The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hearing wider range of radio waves from objects in space

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CANBERRA: New technology installed on CSIRO’s Parkes radio telescope today will let astronomer­s ‘hear’ a wider range of radio waves from objects in space, opening the way to new science.

The new equipment is a receiver, a ‘bionic ear’ for the cosmos which catches radio waves and turns them into electrical signals for astronomer­s to analyse.

The A$2.5 million (RM7.47 million) instrument was developed by CSIRO and a consortium of Australian universiti­es led by Swinburne University of Technology, with funding from the Australian Research Council, Germany’s Max Planck Institute for Radioastro­nomy and the Chinese Academy of Sciences.

CSIRO and Swinburne each designed and built parts of the system.

“Stars and galaxies ‘sing’ with different voices, some high, some low,” CSIRO astronomer Dr George Hobbs said. “It’s like a choir out there.” A receiver determines which radio frequencie­s the telescope can hear.

“Until now we’ve had receivers that heard just one part of the choir at a time,” Dr Hobbs said.

“This new one lets us listen to the whole choir at once.”

The new receiver covers a very wide frequency range, 700 MHz to 4 GHz. It does the work of several existing receivers and also covers extra frequencie­s that they don’t.

Parkes has been continuall­y upgraded throughout its lifetime and is already one of the world’s most productive radio telescopes.

The telescope is now 10,000 times more sensitive than when it was built in 1961 and has found most of the known pulsars and most of the ‘fast radio bursts’ that still mystify astronomer­s.

It also helped reveal the nature of bright sources called quasars and discovered a new spiral arm in our Galaxy.

“Most of the projects the new system will be used for are forefront astronomic­al science,” Swinburne’s Professor Matthew Bailes, who led the university consortium, said.

Those projects include searching for gravitatio­nal waves from black holes in the early Universe, studying the insides of neutron stars, and mapping the magnetic fields that run through our Galaxy.

The new receiver will let the telescope do different projects at the same time.

“While some of us are timing

The expertise built up in these technologi­es will enable Australia to compete effectivel­y into the era of the Square Kilometre Array, the world’s largest radio telescope. – Dr George Hobbs

a pulsar, other astronomer­s could be looking for the signs of newborn stars,” Dr Hobbs said.

“The expertise built up in these technologi­es will enable Australia to compete effectivel­y into the era of the Square Kilometre Array, the world’s largest radio telescope.”

 ?? — CSIRO photos ?? Dr Jane Kaczmarek working at the Parkes radio telescope.
— CSIRO photos Dr Jane Kaczmarek working at the Parkes radio telescope.
 ??  ?? CSIRO astronomer­s Dr George Hobbs and Dr Jane Kaczmarek with the receiver.
CSIRO astronomer­s Dr George Hobbs and Dr Jane Kaczmarek with the receiver.

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