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Astronomy Beyond 2009 Large Radio Astronomy Projects Ron Ekers, CSIRO IYA Closing Ceremony, Padua, Italy 10 Jan 2010 Outline From Galileo to Jansky Astronomy at radio wave lengths Impact of new technology Science Opportunities – Examples of a few key experiments with some of the proposed facilities Future Facilities – – – – – EVLA ATA, GMRT ALMA LOFAR, MWA Focal Plane Arrays » Parkes, Arecibo, ASKAP, Apertif (cm » SPT… (mm) – SKA 10 Jan 2010 R D Ekers 2 Galileo Galilei – 1609 Galileo builds a telescope and he sees the moons of Jupiter. “Four planets, never seen since the beginning of the World right up to our day” 3 Galileo’s discoveries Used an instrument built for other purposes Unexpected discoveries – Except for phases of Venus But directly relevant to current theories of the Sun centered model of the Universe – Copernicus, Kepler Galileo had no doubt that Copernicus and Kepler were right, yet he continued to search for evidence in favour of this model in the hope of converting the establishment, which still clung to the traditional view of an Earth-centred universe. 10 Jan 2010 R D Ekers 4 323 years later Mankind had its next new view of the Universe The discovery of a new kind of telescope opens a new window on the Universe using radio waves 5 Karl Jansky Bell Telephone Laboratory 1932 6 Discoveries made with new instruments Used a telescope built for other purposes – Communications Completely unexpected discovery No existing theoretical framework – Required a universe with non-thermal phenomena 10 Jan 2010 R D Ekers 8 The 4 Nobel prizes in Radio Astronomy Cosmic Microwave Background (1965) – Nobel prize to Penzias and Wilson CMB spectrum & anisotropy (1989) – COBE satellite – John Mather & George Smoot Discovery of pulsars (1967) – radio pulsations from neutron stars – Tony Hewish (Jocelyn Bell) & Aperture synthesis (1967) – Martin Ryle Verification of Einstein's prediction of gravitational radiation – 1993 Noble prize to Taylor and Hulse Discoveries made with new instruments: CMB discovery Unexpected discovery Used a telescope built for other purposes – Communications Directly relevant to existing models of a big bang expanding Universe – Dicke, Novikov, Gamov – These models had not been accepted by the (steady state) establishment 10 Jan 2010 R D Ekers 10 Radio Telescope Sensitivity 5 Exponential increase Jansky 1931 - the beginning Reber Log Relative Sensitivity 4 3 in sensitivity x 105 since 1940 ! Dwingeloo Jodrell Bank Parkes 2 » 3 year doubling time for sensitivity Bonn 1 WSRT Arecibo 0 AT VLA GMRT 1hT GBT -1 -2 SKA -3 1940 1950 29 Sep 2008 1960 1970 1980 Date 1990 2000 2010 R D Ekers 11 Radio Telescope Sensitivity 5 Exponential increase in Reber Log Relative Sensitivity 4 3 sensitivity x 105 since 1940 ! Dwingeloo Jodrell Bank Parkes 2 Bonn 1 WSRT Arecibo 0 AT VLA GMRT 1hT GBT -1 » Eg Arecibo upgrade » Parkes upgrade » Exponential growth needs -2 SKA -3 1940 Upgrades can’t sustain an exponential increase 1950 29 Sep 2008 1960 1970 1980 Date 1990 2000 new technology 2010 R D Ekers 12 Commercial Drivers for Technology The advances described by Moore’s Law are directly applicable to radio telescope design MMIC (large scale integrated circuit) technology allows cheap duplication of complex circuits – Driven by eg mobile radio communications technology Optical fibre communications Cheap mass storage The R&D needed at radio wavelengths is directly relevant to the broader S&T research priorities in most countries RDE OECD Munich 2004 13 New Parameter Space Wide FOV – Feed arrays Sensitivity – Collecting area Wide bandwidth – Signal processing Very high angular resolution – Wide band communications links Interference mitigation 29 Sep 2008 R D Ekers 14 ALMA ALMA – Transformational science at mm wavelengths Born in late 1980’s – 20 year realisation Technology shift from single dish to an array 10 Jan 2009 R D Ekers 15 ALMA First Fringes: 12 Nov 2009 12 Nov 2009 ESO 16 VLA 1980 E-VLA 2010 VLA New Mexico Time Magazine’s Opinion Square km telescope: the concept Array with a very large number of elements Square km of collecting area Frequency range 0.03 - 20GHz Sensitivity 100 x VLA Resolution 0.1” – 0.001” Multibeam (at lower frequencies) 12 July, 1999 R. Ekers - Square Km Array 22 Square Km Array 16 feb 2006 R D Ekers 23 Achieving the vision International Collaboration? To build facilities which no single nation can afford Coordination – Avoiding wasteful competition Broader knowledge base, cross fertilisation Wealth creation IAU Large Telescope WG – Initiated after the SKA resolution and discussion at the den Hague GA in 1994 OECD Global Science Forum 10 Jan 2010 24 o 15 Mpc at z = 2 SKA’s 1 field-of-view 29 Sep 2008 SKA 20 cm and x100 possible! SKA 6cm HST ALMA R D Ekers 25 SKA Key Science Drivers ORIGINS Probing the Dark Ages When & how were the first stars formed? Cosmology and Galaxy Evolution Atrobiology Galaxies, Dark Energy and Dark Matter What are the conditions for life and where can it be found? FUNDAMENTAL FORCES Strong-field tests of General Relativity Was Einstein correct? Origin & Evolution of Cosmic Magnetism Where does magnetism come from? plus The Exploration of the Unknown (Special Session 5) Science with the Square Kilometre Array (2004, eds. C. Carilli & S. Rawlings, New Astron. Rev., 48) Possible telescope configurations Communications links + power Dense aperture arrays Receptors in stations along spiral arms Central Processing Facility 40 stations 5-200 km 40 remote stations 200 to >3000 km Station 1500 dishes (15m diameter) in central ~5 km 1500 dishes from 5 km to 3000+ km Sparse aperture arrays Multi-pixels at mid-frequencies with a dense aperture array EMBRACE SKADS 2-PAD LOFAR IN A NUTSHELL – 1 • Frequency range 10 - 80 MHz & 110 - 240 MHz Two orders of mag. improvement in resolution and sensitivity • Baselines: ~ 100 km (NL) Initially – “Phase 1” ~ 1000 km (EU) Ultimately – “Phase 2” 2 km core (40% of area) + 45 stations • Novel Aspects: – Most versatile of planned LF arrays – Element/ stations with phased arrays • ~ 17000 dipoles • Electronic pointing • Many simultaneous beams – Supercomputer as correlator – RFI mitigation – Prototype for SKA technology – Multidisciplinary sensor array • e.g. Geophones and infrasound – How does gas extraction effect earth crust? Southern Africa Dish construction building First KAT7 antenna Support base Proposed SKA Timeline 2006 2007 2008 2009 Demonstrator developments Site bid 2011 SKA Pathfinder construction Technology selection 2020 2013 SKA Construction 2070+ Full SKA operational Site ranking SKA production readiness review Nov 2009 R. Schilizzi 31 ASKAP A few Key Science Experiments 33 Pulsars as Gravitational Wave Detectors Millisecond pulsars act as arms of huge detector: Pulsars LISA Advanced LIGO SKA Pulsar Timing Array: Look for global spatial pattern in timing residuals! • Complementary in Frequency! 2004 Kramer - Leiden retreat (updated) 34 Enhanced SETI Searching SKA ATA Phoenix Giordano Bruno (1548-1600) the universe is infinite, composed of many worlds and animated by common life Epoch of reionization Avery Meiksen 29 Sep 2008 R D Ekers 36 High Redshift HI Experiments Bebbington (1985); Uson; et alia Current generation: – – – – – PAST 21CMA (Pen, Peterson, Wang: China) $$ LOFAR (de Bruyn et alia: The Netherlands) $$$ MWA (Lonsdale, Hewitt et alia: WA) $$ PAPER (Backer, Bradley: NRAO GBWA?) $$ CORE (Ekers, Subramanian, Chippendale: WA) $ Next generation: – SKA (International) $$$$$ 5 Aug 2005 Don Backer 37 CMB acoustic peaks 29 Sep 2008 R D Ekers 38 Simulation of Evolution of Acoustic Oscillations TIME 29 Sep 2008 R D Ekers 39 The excitement of these powerful new instruments is not in the old questions they will answer . but in the new questions they will raise. Nov 2009 K. I. Kellermann 6 40