Las Vegas Review-Journal

Smile and say ‘cheese,’ cosmos

Array of giant telescopes scanning, surveying swath of space

- By Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press

ALBUQUERQU­E, N.M. — Employing an array of giant telescopes positioned in the New Mexico desert, astronomer­s have started a massive surveying project aimed at producing the most detailed view ever made of such a large portion of space using radio waves emitted from throughout the Milky Way and beyond.

The National Radio Astronomy Observator­y announced the project this week, saying the Very Large Array will make three scans of the sky that’s visible from the scrubland of the San Augustin Plains. It is one of the best spots on the planet to scan space, with 80 percent of the Earth’s sky visible from the location.

The array works like a camera. But instead of collecting light waves to make images, the telescopes that look like big satellite dishes receive radio waves emitted by cosmic explosions and other interstell­ar phenomenon.

Astronomer­s expect the images gathered by the array will allow them to detect in finer detail gamma ray bursts, supernovas and other cosmic events that visible-light telescopes cannot see due to dust present throughout the universe.

For example, the array can peer through the thick clouds of dust and gas where stars are born.

Scientists involved in the project say the results will provide valuable informatio­n for astrophysi­cs researcher­s.

“In addition to what we think (the survey) will discover, we undoubtedl­y will be surprised by discoverie­s we aren’t anticipati­ng now,” project director Claire Chandler said in a statement. “That is the lesson of scientific history and perhaps the most exciting part of a project like this.”

The survey is possible because of a major technologi­cal upgrade at the Very Large Array, which was initially conceived in the 1960s and built in the 1970s. The antennas relied on their original electronic­s and processing systems for years until a recent overhaul made the system capable of producing much higher resolution images.

The work done at the Very Large Array is similar to that of the Hubble Space Telescope — making high-quality images so scientists can better study objects in the universe and the physics of how they work.

Research efforts elsewhere search the galaxy for signals or evidence of extraterre­strials, but the New Mexico operation would almost certainly get involved if signals are received, said Very Large Array spokesman Dave Finley.

“I do think when the time comes that they find a signal that they think is the real thing, the first phone call they will make will be to us. They’ll want an image of that region,” Finley said.

 ?? Susan Montoya Bryan ?? The Associated Press Four of an army of radio antennas that make up the Very Large Array astronomic­al observator­y on the plains of San Augustin west of Socorro, N.M. The Very Large Array is being used to make what astronomer­s say will be the sharpest...
Susan Montoya Bryan The Associated Press Four of an army of radio antennas that make up the Very Large Array astronomic­al observator­y on the plains of San Augustin west of Socorro, N.M. The Very Large Array is being used to make what astronomer­s say will be the sharpest...

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