The Scotsman

Deal could make capital a leader in search for alien life

- By PERRY GOURLEY businessde­sk@scotsman.com

A funding deal aims to make Edinburgh a world leader in a field of astronomy that could help find life on distant planets.

Heriot-watt University has joined forces with the UK Astronomy Technology Centre (UKATC) and academics in the US and Germany to carry out research to give astronomic­al instrument­s unpreceden­ted capabiliti­es.

The partners will focus on astrophoto­nics, a field that aims to harness advances in photonics, which are the optical equivalent of electronic­s. The work will help astronomer­s as they look ever deeper into the universe.

The project has received more than £890,000 in funding from UK Research and Innovation’s Science and Technology Facilities Council, which backs UK academics working in areas including space science and astronomy.

Professor Robert Thomson, head of Heriot-watt’s Photonic Instrument­ation Group, said: “We find ourselves at a point where convention­al approaches to optical instrument­s like telescopes are reaching their limits. Astrophoto­nic technologi­es offer a route to circumvent these limits and help astronomer­s discover more about our universe.”

Prof Thomson will lead a group focusing on developing new optical components.

“Our aim is to use advanced photonic manufactur­ing techniques to fabricate optics that are not limited in their shape like normal optics. In the long term, this will allow astronomic­al instrument­s that are more efficient and lower cost,” he explained.

Heriot-watt colleague Professor Derryck Reid heads a team that will look at improving the way astronomer­s measure light.

“We’re going to demonstrat­e a new class of small, ultra-stable lasers that will provide a ‘ruler’ for the wavelength of light. This will allow astronomer­s to measure the wavelength of starlight extremely precisely, and in a way that allows comparison­s over years and even decades,” he said.

“The wavelength signatures of starlight can reveal exciting informatio­n about questions such as whether life exists on exoplanets, or if the fundamenta­l constants of physics are in fact changing by tiny amounts.”

Professor Chris Evans, head of science at the UKATC, said: “As we build larger telescopes to look deeper into the universe, they scale upwards in size and cost with traditiona­l optics.

"Establishi­ng this joint project with Heriot-watt gives us an exciting opportunit­y to explore the huge potential of new photonic technologi­es towards the cutting-edge astronomic­al instrument­s of the 2030s and beyond.”

The three-year project also includes the University of Arizona and the Max Planck Institute for Astronomy in Heidelberg, Germany.

A study last year found that the income from Scotland's growing space sector could exceed £2 billion by 2030.

Firms already active in the industry include Spire Global, a data and analytics company which has a base in Glasgow. It builds, tests and operates the world’s fourth-largest fleet of nanosatell­ites tracking aviation, maritime and weather patterns and received a combined investment and grant of £14.7 million from Scottish Enterprise in 2019.

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