News on ancient-astronomy
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- Mountain top explodes friday to make way for giant telescope
- The Titanic disaster: Blame the Moon
- Herschels records available online
- 4 new laser telescopes delivered to ESO
- New supercomputer needed to handle new super observatory
- One more step for the Magellan Giant Telescope
- A boost for European radio-astronomy
- New technique makes observatories better than spacetelescopes
- ESO's 50 year anniversary
- Comet lovejoy over ESO
- Revolutionary new submilimeter camera first ligth
- First ligth for virtual 360 000km telescope
- ESO's Extremely Large Telescope one step closer to reality
- David H. Levy Logbooks online
- 10 years of adaptive optics
- Belgian astronomer discovered Big Bang - Not Edwin Hubble
- New privately funded radio-telescope array
- Full-size mock-up of world’s future largest telescope mirror
- Cryogenic Catering Truck Comes to the ALMA Observatory
- ALMA array ready for operation
- Astronomers start testing IR-camera at worlds largest telescope
- Worlds larget radio antenna
- Subaru telescope optics damaged
- Funidng for new giant solar telescope in place
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Worlds larget radio antenna
Saturday, 09 July 2011 04:35
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| Astronomy - Historic-astronomy |
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The Founding Board of the Square Kilometre Array (SKA) telescope project today reported at the SKA Forum 2011 that significant progress was made when the process and timeline for selection of the host site for the telescope were unveiled. The SKA is a €1.5 billion global science project to build the world’s largest and most sensitive radio telescope. Sites in South Africa and Australia have been short-listed to host the central core of the SKA telescope; a final decision on the location is expected to be made in early 2012 by the SKA Board of Directors. The technical assessment and evaluation phase of the site selection process is being overseen by the SKA Siting Group (SSG), which reports to the SKA Founding Board. The first step in this phase is information gathering where the candidate sites will make submissions covering:
The SKA Site Advisory Committee (SSAC) of appointed independent experts will make a recommendation on the preferred site based on reports from expert panels and consultants together with the submissions from the candidate sites. The SKA Board of Directors is expected to make the final site decision in early 2012. Professor Richard Schilizzi, Director of the SKA, said: “Selection of the host site for the SKA will be made in terms of characteristics for the best science as well as the capability and cost of supporting a very large infrastructure, taking the political and working environment into account.” Selection factors that will be considered in the decision making process will include levels of radio frequency interference, the long term sustainability of a radio quiet zone, the physical characteristics of the site, data network connectivity across the vast distances covered by the telescope as well as operating and infrastructure costs. The site selection timeline and process Source. SKA telescope.lorg |




