22 Amazing Observatories Where Our Radio Eyes Watch the Universe

22 Amazing Observatories Where Our Radio Eyes Watch the Universe

Humans can only see visible light—the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that is visible to the human eye. That’s why so hard to study celestial objects hidden behind cosmic dust. But radio astronomy reveals those parts of the Universe that can’t be seen in visible light—and the secrets of dust-shrouded galaxies like our lovely Milky Way.

Read more…


    



The World’s Biggest Telescope Is Finally Online

The World's Biggest Telescope Is Finally Online

With the arrival of the 54th—and final—12-meter wide radio telescope, the single largest astronomical project humanity has ever under taken can finally begin peering into the heavens at full strength.

Read more…


    



The Massive Radio Telescope That Peers Into the Universe’s Darkest Corners [Video]

The 13,000 square-mile National Radio Quiet Zone is home to the Green Bank Telescope. The 2-acre, 16-million pound dish is the largest, fully steerable radio telescope in the world. And, as this gorgeous video by Motherboard highlights, it might be in danger. More »

IBM cluster powers Murchison Widefield Array’s radio telescope, answers mysteries of the universe faster than ever (video)

IBM cluster powers Murchison Widefield Array's radio telescope, answers mysteries of the universe faster than ever video

Radio telescope operators have as much of a problem coping with the avalanche of data as getting that information in the first place. The Victoria University of Wellington is all too aware and is leaning on IBM for a powerful (if very tongue-tying) iDataPlex dx360 M3 compute cluster to sift through the deluge at the upcoming Murchison Widefield Array. Combined, the 4,096 array antennas probing deep space and solar atmospherics will have the Xeon-based cluster tackling signal data to the tune of 8GB per second, and about 50TB per day — that’s a Nexus 7‘s worth of astronomy faster than you can sneeze, folks. A 10Gbps network connection will feed the results to Perth to save scientists a roughly 435-mile trek. Construction is still in mid-stride, but the $51 million Australian ($52.2 million US) being spent on the Murchison array may be worthwhile if it helps solve the riddles of star formation and solar flares.

Continue reading IBM cluster powers Murchison Widefield Array’s radio telescope, answers mysteries of the universe faster than ever (video)

Filed under:

IBM cluster powers Murchison Widefield Array’s radio telescope, answers mysteries of the universe faster than ever (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Jul 2012 20:54:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Ubergizmo  |  sourceMurchison Widefield Array (Facebook)  | Email this | Comments