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12 Space


Astronomers gather information


about space in buildings called


observatories. Many astronomers use


an optical telescope to look at light


from space. Radio astronomers use


a radio telescope or an. ARRAY.


WHAT DO ASTRONOMERS USE ARRAYS FOR?
Using arrays, radio astronomers can make detailed
radio maps of many different kinds of objects in
space. The objects they study include quasars and
radio galaxies with immense plumes of radio-emitting
gas stretching for millions of light years, the remains
of supernovas (exploded stars), gas bubbles blown
off dying stars, and the planets Jupiter and Saturn.

Astronomers often use several radio
telescopes working together as an array.
An array creates a large total area for
collecting signals, and can reveal far
more detail than one dish on its own.
The signals from each dish are combined
using a technique called interferometry.

WHY ARE MOST OBSERVATORIES
ON TOP OF MOUNTAINS?
Optical telescope observatories are built on
high ground above the thickest layers of Earth’s
atmosphere. Astronomers can see into space more
clearly from there because there are fewer air currents,
and the air is cleaner and contains less moisture.

HOW DO RADIO TELESCOPES WORK?
Huge, dish-shaped radio telescopes pick up radio
waves from space. The dish gathers the signals and
reflects them onto an aerial. The aerial sends electrical
signals to a receiver, then to a computer, which
converts them into a false-colour radio picture.

FIND OUT MORE. Astronomy 11 • Space Observatories 29 • Stars 24–25 • Telecommunications 192–


4 VERY LARGE ARRAY
The world’s largest radio telescope
array is the Very Large Array in
Socorro, New Mexico, USA. It has
27 movable dishes. Working
together, they see as much
detail as one dish 27 km
(17 miles) wide.

The New Technology Telescope has a
mirror 3.5 m (11 ft 6 in) wide and sits in
a rotating room, so that the astronomer
can turn with the telescope

OBSERVATORIES


Observatories


LA SILLA OBSERVATORY 3
The telescope domes at La Silla
Observatory, in Chile, are 2,400 m
(7,900 ft) above sea level and remote
from artificial light and pollution.

ARRAYS


1 RADIO MAP OF SKY
If our eyes could detect radio
waves, this is how we would see
the sky from Earth. The red band
shows the strongest signals.

Main building
houses a 3.6 m
(11 ft 10 in) telescope

Dome opens at
night to reveal sky
to telescope

Dish collects radio
signals and focuses
them onto aerial

Aerial picks up
signals and feeds
them to receiver

Rail track
allows dishes
to move

Pivot allows
dish to tilt

observatory

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