South Africa's MeerKAT to help unlock
mysteries of universe
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[July 14, 2018]
By Wendell Roelf
CARNARVON, South Africa (Reuters) - A
scientific mega-project to unlock cosmic conundrums from dark energy to
detecting extraterrestrial life was given a boost on Friday, when the
64-dish MeerKAT radio telescope was inaugurated in the remote South
African town of Carnarvon.
Built at a cost of 4.4 billion rand, MeerKAT will be incorporated into
the complex Square Kilometre Array (SKA) instrument, which when fully
operational in the late 2020s would be the world’s biggest and most
powerful radio telescope.
Up to 3,000 dishes co-hosted in Africa and Australia will then be able
to scan the sky 10,000 times faster with 50 times the sensitivity of any
other telescope and produce images that exceed the resolution quality of
the Hubble Space telescope, scientists said of SKA.
"MeerKAT will address some of the key science questions in modern
astrophysics – how did galaxies form, how are they evolving, how did we
come to be here ... and for those purposes MeerKAT is the best in the
world," said Fernando Camilo, chief scientist at the South African Radio
Astronomy Observatory which built and operates the telescope.
At an inauguration attended by government officials and foreign
dignitaries, Camilo released new images taken by MeerKAT of the region
surrounding the supermassive black hole at the centre of the Milky Way
galaxy, some 25,000 light years away.
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"We didn’t expect to use our telescope so early in the game, it’s not
even optimized, but to turn it to the centre of the galaxy and obtain
these stunning images, the best in the world, tells you you’ve done
something right, better than right,” he told Reuters.
MeerKAT is a followup to the KAT 7 (Karoo Array Telescope), built in the
vast semi-desert Karoo region north of Cape Town to demonstrate South
Africa's ability to host the SKA. Its name is a play on words: in
Afrikaans "meer" means "more", as in "more KAT", but it also refers to
the small mammal native to the Karoo and famed for standing on its hind
legs to view the world.
Besides ground-breaking astronomy research, MeerKAT is also pushing
boundaries in big data and high-performance computing with the likes of
IBM <IBM.N> helping develop systems able to handle the dizzying amount
of data fed from each individual antenna to supercomputers buried deep
underground to limit radio interference.
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Dusk falls over radio telescope dishes of the KAT-7 Array at the
proposed South African site for the Square Kilometre Array (SKA)
telescope near Carnavon in the country's remote Northern Cape
province, South Africa, May 17, 2012. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings/File
Photo
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The biggest radio telescope of its kind in the southern hemisphere,
MeerKAT looks like a cluster of eggs when you first see it about an
hour’s drive outside Carnarvon.
But up close, each sensitive dish is almost as high as a three
storey building, rotating on a fixed pedestal as it scans the sky.
Chosen because of its remoteness, with hills providing an extra
shield against radio interference, the project site is the main
African base for hundreds of antennae that will eventually be placed
as far as Kenya and Ghana.
"The first phase of SKA 1 in South Africa is to add 133 antennas to
that (of MeerKAT)," said Rob Adam, an SKA international board
member.
The expansion is expected to start next year, said Adam, with the
first prototype dish built in China already on site about 450
kilometers north of Cape Town in the Northern Cape province. MeerKAT
will operate independently before being incorporated into SKA 1
sometime around 2023, Adam said.
(Reporting by Wendell Roelf; Editing by Peter Graff)
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