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SPACE SCOPES
Battle over SKA super-telescope leads to split site
by Staff Writers
Amsterdam (AFP) May 25, 2012


A long-running joust to host a radio telescope that would give mankind its farthest peek into the Universe ended on Friday with a Solomon-like judgement to split the site between Australia and South Africa.

"We have decided on a dual site approach," said John Womersley, chairman of the board of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) project, at a press conference in the Netherlands.

He was speaking at Amsterdam's Schiphol Airport following a meeting of the SKA organisation's members.

The two southern-hemisphere countries had been fighting fiercely to host the innovation, billed as a revolutionary giant that will be 50 times more powerful than present radio telescopes. New Zealand is included in Australia's bid.

Conceived more than two decades ago, the Square Kilometre Array aims at bringing together unprecedented size and new technology.

It would use a forest of antennae, spread out over remote terrain, to pick up radio signals from cosmic phenomena that cannot be detected by optical telescopes.

Stars that flare into life or explode at their death, black holes, mysterious "dark energy," and relic traces of ancient events that occurred in the dawn of the Universe 14 billion years ago, are among its targets.

"Today we are a stage closer to achieving our goal of building the SKA," said Womersley in a press release.

"This hugely important step for the project allows us to progress the design and prepare for the construction phase of the telescope.

"The SKA will transform our view of the Universe; with it, we will see back to the moments after the Big Bang and discover previously unexplored parts of the cosmos."

South Africa swallowed its disappointment, saying a split was "unexpected".

"We had hoped the unambiguous recommendation (to build the telescope in one location) ... would be accepted as the most sound scientific outcome; however we accept the compromise in the interest of progress," Minister of Science and Technology Naledi Pandor said.

For its part Australia was jubilant.

"This is an outstanding result for the Australia-New Zealand bid after many years of preparation and an intensive international process," said Science and Technology Minister Chris Evans.

At the press conference, Womersley said the compromise decision was taken after a recent meeting by a SKA working group, which he said "made the best use of both the significant investments these countries made into astronomy."

But a source told AFP the decision was made because the SKA organisation wanted to "maintain our broad support base", hinting that the there was concern that the loser of the two contenders might have pulled support.

The scheme entails linking 3,000 antennae, sited in groups along five spiral arms, progressively farther from a core array.

Together, this creates a collection area of one square kilometre (0.4 square miles), leading to a 50-fold gain on sensitivity compared to present radio telescopes.

The idea of the SKA was floated back in 1991, but since 2005 the project has been troubled by wrangles over the site and concerns over budget.

Australia's International Centre for Radio Astronomy (ICRAR) said the "aperture array" type of antenna intended for Western Australia were designed to pick up low-frequency radio waves, which would be useful to survey large portions of the sky quickly.

In southern Africa, the dish-type antennae would observe smaller sections of the sky in more detail. They would follow up on regions of interest discovered in the survey.

Despite these differing roles, there remain important blanks about how the two rival schemes will dovetail and whether there will be implications on timetable and cost, said analysts.

"The office of the SKA Organisation will now lead a detailed definition period to clarify the implementation," the SKA said. The assessment will take about six months.

Australia's core site is about 100 kilometres (60 miles) west of Meekathara in western Australia, with antennae distributed as far as New Zealand. South Africa's site in the arid Karoo region would be connected to dishes stretching across southern and eastern Africa and as far away as Ghana.

Headquartered in Manchester, England, the SKA is a partnership of 67 organisations in 20 countries. Eight countries are full members of the consortium, including Australia and South Africa.

According to plans that were made for a single-site project, the first phase of the scheme would be completed by 2019 and become operational in 2020.

The second and final phase would be completed in 2024.

"The target construction cost is 1,500 million euros," or $1.87 billion at today's exchange rates, SKA said on Friday.

This figure is unchanged from previous estimates, but sources at the SKA said there are likely to be additional costs from a dual-site format.

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SAfrica taken by surprise at giant telescope verdict
Pretoria (AFP) May 25, 2012 - South Africa said it was taken by surprise on Friday at the decision that it has to share with Australia the hosting of the world's most powerful radio telescope.

It will co-host with Australia the radio telescope that would give mankind its farthest peek into the Universe, the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) project announced in the Netherlands.

Minister of Science and Technology Naledi Pandor said the decision to split the hosting of SKA was "unexpected".

"We accept the compromise in the interest of science and acknowledgement of the sterling work done by our scientists," she said.

The bulk of the antennae would be built in South Africa, in the southwestern arid Karoo region which is also the country's the most sparsely populated area.

She said she had hoped a recommendation to build the telescope in one place "would be accepted as the most sound scientific outcome."

Pandor tried to downplay suggestions that the country was disappointed at the decision to split the locations of the telescope.

"Of course we can't be disappointed three quarters is pretty good in my view," she said.

"I don't like disappointments, especially when Africa wins."

Justin Jonas, a leading South African scientist with the telescope project said: "One may feel that this is a compromise situation, we might feel slightly disappointed that we didn't get the whole thing, but I think we should emphasise that we did get the majority of ... one of the largest scientific instruments in the world.

He added that it was a "turning point in Africa where we are becoming a destination for science and engineering, and not just perhaps a place where there are resources."

The two southern-hemisphere countries had been fighting fiercely to host the innovation, billed as a revolutionary giant that will be 50 times more powerful than present radio telescopes. New Zealand is included in Australia's bid.

Conceived more than two decades ago, the Square Kilometre Array aims at bringing together unprecedented size and new technology.

Scientists hope its massive new radio telescope linking 3,000 antenna dishes, will shed new light on fundamental questions about the universe, including how it began, why it's expanding and whether it contains life beyond our planet.

South Africa already has the largest optical telescope in the southern hemisphere, the Southern African Large Telescope (SALT), built near Sutherland, a town in the southwest of the country.

The southern African country had worked on the bid with eight other African countries -- Botswana, Ghana, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, Namibia and Zambia.



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