Antarctic Telescope Funded
An anonymous reader writes "SpaceflightNow reports that a multi-institutional team of scientists led by the University of Chicago will receive $16.6 million from the National Science Foundation over the next five years to build a telescope at the South Pole aimed at piercing one of the darkest secrets of the universe. The telescope will help scientists to reveal new details regarding a mysterious phenomenon called dark energy, which makes the expansion of the universe accelerate."
antarCtic! Antarctic! MORONS. It's like having JeffK write all your columns! "Lunix Dosent' Cahrash!"
I have a few concerns I wonder if you all share.
First, How much is it going to cost to keep the people there alive and happy etc... Last time I checked it gets very very cold down there, and it takes a LOT of power and money to maintain equipment as well as habitable conditions.
Secondly, Why don't they make more use of it then finding out if some "dark energy," which to me sounds too sci-fi to be true, exhists or not?
Thirdly, will it be stationary like Ariceibo or will they be able to move and aim the telescope. The closest I could find to an answer is, "This will be the largest bolometric array yet built," and I am not quite the astronomer, so I would like to know. It seems like an aweful waste to have it fixed there where it would have a small area to search as opposed to the much greater area it could search if it was aimable.
My fourth and final concern is lighting... I know that in the northern arctic circle they have a lot of daylght in summer (something like 18+ hours if I remember right.) Is it the same for Antarctica? And how will they overcome that if it is?
Erutangis ym si siht.
"Hey brother Christian with your high and mighty errand / your actions speak so loud I can't hear a word you're saying"
They should put a radio telescope there, too... just so we can make sure we check every inch of the sky with SETI@Home ;)
"To confine our attention to terrestrial matters would be to limit the human spirit." -Stephen Hawking
The background temperature of the universe is so cold-hundreds of degrees below zero-that even ice is hot by comparison.
Wow! In other news, a journalist explains that the sun is so hot that it makes BURNING COALS seem cold! The journalist goes on to say that he is so smart that he makes that door-knob over there look completely stupid.
Google gives some references for tartic which suggest the term finds use in connection with fermenting alcoholic drinks. Presumably it's the same as tartaric - IIRC one of Louis Pasteur's earliest pieces of research to catch public attention was done under contract from some vintners and involved the mirror-image isomers of the compound or one of its derivatives.
Having all the array cold will decrease the thermal noise generated by the array itself.
Not to mention they can overclock all their processors, woo hoo!
Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
Remember, down there they don't have that pesky ozone layer to obscure their view! :)
GMD
watch this
"This will be the largest bolometric array yet built,"
Bolometric: (bo-lo-met-ric) (1) A Standard unit of Mass, based upon a Mark I Bolo (Manufactured by GM's BOLO Division). For instance, a Bolo Mark XXXIII weighs in at 32,000 tons (U.S.) or a much more reasonable 213 Bolos.
Which then begs the question; Is this the standard unit of measure for Dark Energy also?
(Sorry, I even left my desk before posting this, but I couldn't resist.)
LongTail SSH Brute Force analysis tool is here!
However, nowhere else on earth is the natural light pollution worse. For six months the sun doesn't set, and for another three there is twilight. True darkness is only experienced between 11th May to 31st July.
Oh, Langley devised the bolometer:
It's really a kind of thermometer
Which measures the heat
From a polar bear's feet
At a distance of half a kilometer
- Unknown
Cthulhu loves you.