The Korea Times

China’s new giant radio telescope finds two pulsars

- By Laurie Chen (South China Morning Post)

The world’s largest single-dish radio telescope has found two pulsars after one year of trial operations, state news agency Xinhua reported on Tuesday.

The pulsars were discovered on Aug. 22 and 25 by researcher­s from the National Astronomic­al Observator­ies of China (NAOC), according to chief scientist Li Di.

Named J1859-01 and J1931-01, the pulsars are 16,000 light years and 4,100 light years from Earth respective­ly.

The discoverie­s were confirmed by Australia’s Parkes radio telescope last month, the report said.

Pulsars are spinning collapsed stars larger than the sun, which emit flickering beams of radiation across the universe that can only be detected by sensitive telescopes.

Completed in September last year, the telescope is named Fast (the Five-hundred-meter Aperture Spher- ical Telescope) and covers an area roughly the size of 30 soccer pitches, making it the world’s biggest radio telescope.

“It is truly encouragin­g to have achieved such results within just one year,” Peng Bo, deputy director of Fast, was quoted as saying.

The telescope is a third of the way through its three-year initial testing phase.

It is situated in a large natural sinkhole in Pingtang county in southwest China’s Guizhou Province.

The telescope’s mission is to “listen” for pulsars and other interstell­ar radio signals which might give clues about how the universe first formed, as well as finding possible signs of extraterre­strial life.

According to Xinhua, the telescope cost 1.2 billion yuan ($180 million), and took five years to build.

The project displaced 8,000 people living nearby to create the 5km radius of silence needed for the telescope to work properly.

When fully operationa­l, the sheer scale and complexity of the telescope could potentiall­y lead to major discoverie­s in astronomy.

The large state investment involved in the project, which is 22 years in the making, highlights China’s clear ambition to become a global science and technology powerhouse.

China is ranked second only to the United States in terms of scientific investment and the number of scientific research papers published, according to the BBC.

The second-largest radio telescope on Earth, at 305 meters wide, is at the Arecibo Observator­y in Puerto Rico.

It is most famous for sending out a radio signal “message” in 1974 containing basic informatio­n about humanity and Earth, in the hope that extraterre­strials will receive it.

 ?? China News Service-SCMP ?? Visitors take pictures of the Fast telescope in Guizhou Province.
China News Service-SCMP Visitors take pictures of the Fast telescope in Guizhou Province.

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