Is the Canadian Arctic the Future of Astronomy?
sciencehabit writes "Frigid temperatures, dry air, and endless nights should, in theory, make the polar regions top spots for ground-based optical astronomy. So far, Antarctica has been getting all the action, with a handful of optical telescopes peering into the sky from the icy continent. But a new study indicates that the Canadian high Arctic is also a good spot for ground-based optical astronomy. In fact, the great white north offers some practical advantages over the Antarctic."
To begin with, it'd probably be easier to get there.
Disclaimer: I've never so much as been to Canada so I don't know what it's like in the polar region there, but I'd imagine that the lack of a huge southwards plane / boat voyage would be an immediate bonus over Antarctica.
Probably be easier to get internet and other communication up there as well.
One thing I know, and that is that I am ignorant...
Telescopes generate huges amount of data. Fiber to the south pole must not be cheap.
10 ?"Hello World" life was simple then
It's hard to believe the US can be the future of any scientific endeavour.
Or use a site at the equator. Its useless arguing between north and south poles. Each can only see half the sky.
http://michaelsmith.id.au
Secondly, I don't see why "endless nights" are so much of an advantage, since that just means your telescope is fairly useless during the "endless days" of the summer months.
-- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
southern sky?
--
bjd
....there may be a serious problem caused by permafrost thaw, the coming years, due to climate change. In other words: what are you going to build upon ?
Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
Maybe initial analysis could be done on site and data dumped to storage media to be couriered elsewhere every few days?
Anything with higher priority could be transmitted by satellite uplink, presuming the cost of such bandwidth is not prohibitive.
For optical astronomy (that is in visible, near-infrared light) the long winter nights are good for observing objects continuously 24/24 as long as non-cloudy sky permits.
Of course the converse occurs in summer when darkness doesn't exist for months.
Polar auroras are also a nuisance.
Do you have a globe? Alaska isn't close enough to the pole for the desired purpose.
Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law
Yeah, Antarctic buildings generally slowly sink/get buried; it's a big challenge. Bedrock is best.
I'm surprised that Iceland isn't more utilized. It's a first-world nation, the north/northeast has lots of areas that are borderline desert, it's pretty far north (Fairbanks-ish, further north than Yellowknife), the whole country is well connected by an excellent road system (except for parts of Vestfirðir), there's a very low population density (and thus low light pollution outside the capitol region), a huge amount of aluminum production (it's one of the main exports), and electrical power is abundant and cheap. Sounds like a good site for building large high-latitude telescopes, IMHO.
There's only one thing I hate about Halloween, which is...
This is a silly suggestion. The future of astronomy is not in Canada but in space...
The arctic has a lot of air traffic. Would that cause any light pollution issues?
XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve your problem, you're not using enough of it. --AC
I suppose weather conditions in Iceland are not favorable. The climate is said to be very erratic. Astronomical observatory built in such place may experience extended periods of downtime due to bad weather.
Aurora occur in rings centered on the magnetic poles, not at the magnetic poles themselves. As activity intensifies, the radius of these rings increases, in parallel with lines of geomagnetic latitude, but even in periods of very low solar activity their radius never goes to near zero -- meaning, there are few aurora near the magnetic poles themselves.
In addition to the scientific benefits, scientists can also finally put to rest the stereotype that nerds are weaklings. Since they will have nothing else to do during downtime, they can prove how manly they are through engaging in polar bear combat and then blogging about how to prepare and eat polar bear steaks. Nothing manlier.
Monstar L
And I am sure the astronomers would love having to wear oxygen masks the whole time they are in the observatory. +1 for continuous airplane air from positive pressure living quarters. You forget that the air is unlivably thin up there.
The high altitude telescopes at Chile takes care of a lot of southern sky.
In the north there is HANLE IAO in the Himalayan deset at 4300m altitude.
So I guess, antarctic telescope would take care of further south, while the arctic will take care of northwards.
My Aurora : http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o91ZsGwJYyg
FB : https://www.facebook.com/TanveersPhotography
Obligatory Family Guy:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aDguY0jtzBQ
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
"and endless nights" ...for maybe 1/4 of the year.
For half the year its about 50% and then 1/4 of the year it's endless daytime.
and you don't have to deal with crossing the North Atlantic.
Well . . . from some places. Getting to Scandinavia from North America without crossing the North Atlantic would be quite an ordeal.
If the Arctic ocean is going to ice free by 2050, how can the air be "dry" in that region of the world? Isn't the air humidified by the ocean?
I mean, I guess that temperatures are lower on Antarctica (because the land keeps the warming currents far from the interior?). The ice never melts (hasn't for millions of years!) and the air stays drier (i guess though even ice sublimates some water vapor). Still it should be a lot drier right?
Have gnu, will travel.
Um wouldn't one of the obvious problems be the build up of ice and snow and the necessity of its removal constantly?
also
Day 215: "Trapped in Telescope again. Polar bears are circling like sharks. Loyd and Weber are gone.I don't know how much longer I can hold out."
Day 216: "Discovered another exoplanet. Tentatively named it Ursa Polaris Pallas Meas Lambe 12."
Day 217: "Another supply air drop came today. Bears ate it. Played with the rest. They are just taunting me now."
Do you have a globe? Alaska isn't close enough to the pole for the desired purpose.
This is the US, we haven't been able to afford globes for classrooms since the '60s.
Being closer to the pole is NOT the issue. Lack of light, pollution, moisture, and atmosphere are the issues. So, being on top of a tall cold mountain in Northern Alaska or Canada would do equally nicely.
To be honest, once spacex has their FH working, we would be smart to develop a small telescope that can be popped into lunar craters esp. on the poles and far side of the moon. Add some relay sats, and away you go. The same can be done on mars.
I prefer the "u" in honour as it seems to be missing these days.
Actually, globes are not provided, for fear of upsetting those who believe the Earth is flat.
It's hard to take a clear picture of a far away galaxy that requires as little cloud and atmospheric interference as possible, and for motors to slowly track the far away object with the slow motion of earth through space.
Putting a telescope on the equator with it's faster motion and hectic atmospheric conditions is the equivalent of trying to take a portrait shot of a race car driver while speeding around a track in fog. Sure, it can be done, but it will never be of the same quality for money spent. This is why space based telescopes are needed for the clearest pictures of the furthest away objects.
Even if it did work, you still don't get the entire sky just by going to the equator. Near the horizon, you have severely bending light, and the accumulation of not just one cloud, but lines of clouds for miles. There is one single location solution for ground based telescopes.
I8-D
This is sounding awful lot like an evil lair or the Fortress of Solitude.
I've always been surprised that North Korea doesn't exploit its situation of having the darkest skies in Asia for the purpose of optical astronomy.
-fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
Iceland has excellent ports and regular shipping service which already takes lots of goods in and out, followed by a quick drive around Hringveginn. You're not going to drive things straight up to the destination in Norway, either -- you'd ship them to Trondheim and then drive them the rest of the way up the E6. Where, unlike Iceland, power, aluminum, and bandwidth are not in surplus.
There's only one thing I hate about Halloween, which is...
Well, that depends on what you mean. If you mean storms, parts of northern Iceland are borderline desert, akin to New Mexico in amount of annual precipitation. Now, the southern coast on the other hand, chunks of it would be considered rain forest if they were forested ;) There's a major rain shadow effect.
There's only one thing I hate about Halloween, which is...
In Soviet Russia astronomers were sent to Arctic to labor camps, you insensitive clod