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One-Mile Telescope

Coordinates:52°09′49″N0°02′14″E / 52.1636°N 0.0371°E /52.1636; 0.0371
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
British array of radio telescopes

One-Mile Telescope
Location(s)United KingdomEdit this at Wikidata
Coordinates52°09′49″N0°02′14″E / 52.1636°N 0.0371°E /52.1636; 0.0371Edit this at Wikidata
One-Mile Telescope is located in the United Kingdom
One-Mile Telescope
Location of One-Mile Telescope
 Related media on Commons
One antenna of the One-Mile Telescope (left), two of the Half-Mile Telescope (centre) and the remains of the4C Array (right) in June 2014

TheOne-Mile Telescope at theMullard Radio Astronomy Observatory (MRAO),Cambridge, UK is an array ofradio telescopes (two fixed and one moveable, fully steerable 60 ft-diameter (18 m)parabolic reflectors operating simultaneously at 1407 MHz and 408 MHz)[1] designed to performaperture synthesisinterferometry.

History

[edit]

The One Mile Telescope was completed by theRadio Astronomy Group ofCambridge University in 1964. The telescope was used to produce the5C catalogue of radio sources.

Observations with larger incremental spacings were used to observe individual radio sources with unprecedented sensitivity, angular resolution, and image quality. These surveys required intensive use of inverseFourier transforms, and were made possible by development of a new generation of computers such as theTitan.

In 1971, SirMartin Ryle described why, in the late 1950s, radio astronomers at MRAO decided on the construction of the new One Mile telescope: "Our object was twofold. First we wanted to extend the range of our observations far back in time to the earliest days of the Universe, and this required a large increase in both sensitivity and resolution. With greater resolution we hoped that we might be able to draw radio maps of individual radio sources with sufficient detail to give some indication of the physical processes which brought them into being."

One of the One Mile Telescope dishes was temporarily used to improve the resolution ofMERLIN (then MTRLI) from 1987 until Autumn 1990.[2]

Technical innovations

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The One-Mile Telescope was the first telescope to use Earth-rotationaperture synthesis (described by Ryle as "super-synthesis"[3]) and the first to give radio maps with a resolution better than that of the human eye. The telescope was made up of three 120 ton dishes, each of which is 18 m in diameter.[3] Two of the dishes are fixed, while the third can be moved along an 800 m-long (half mile) rail track, at speeds of up to 6.4 km/h. There were 60 different stations along the track, which is straight to within 0.9 cm, and whose far end was raised by 5 cm to allow for the curvature of the Earth over its length. The observing frequencies were usually 408 MHz (75 cm; the resolution was 80 arcsec)[1] and 1.4 GHz (21 cm; the resolution was 20 arcsec, three times better than that of the unaided eye).

Notable achievements

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Over a 20-year career, the telescope was used to map individual objects, and to do several deep field surveys. Though still occasionally used, it is now essentially retired (one of the dishes is occasionally used for undergraduate projects or byamateur radio astronomers).

The construction of this telescope and development of the Earth-rotationaperture synthesis used when operating it contributed toMartin Ryle andAntony Hewish receiving theNobel Prize for Physics in 1974.

References

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  1. ^abThe operation of the Cambridge one-mile telescope,Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society, Vol. 134, p.87
  2. ^"MERLIN: The 32-metre Telescope". Merlin.ac.uk. Retrieved17 August 2010.
  3. ^abThe New Cambridge Radio Telescope, Nature, Vol. 194, pp. 517

External links

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