LOFAR, the World's Biggest Telescope, Is Up and Running
HansonMB writes with this bit from Motherboard: "Back in September, Motherboard ventured into the English countryside to listen to the universe. There lives a brand new piece of Europe's already-massive Low Frequency Radio Array radio telescope: a clever EU-wide installation that uses low-tech antennas and supercomputer-power data processing to transform into a giant mega-telescope, absorbing cosmic radio waves from the full sky." That was then; now, says the article, "In the past month, using signals from the new station, LOFAR has delivered its first EU-UK radio 'pictures.'"
Not only is LOFAR up and running, but it beat out the competing project HINEAR, in record time!
If the summary had pointed us to the correct website the few who read the article itself would have seen the lofar isn't simply in the UK. The LOFAR is to big for that. There is one substation in the UK, most are in the Netherlands (since the center is there), some are in Germany, one in France and one in Sweden. These substations are assembled in a giant phased array by means of a supercomputer. This array can look at multiple parts of the sky at the same time while having a great resolution in low frequencies.
Well, I might have a way, but it only works on a semi spherical planet in a vacuum.
Wait, if it's " low frequency radio array telescope ", wouldn't it be "LOFART"?
Don't blame me, but they're the ones who chose the name, I'm just sayin'.